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War in the Balkans

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War in the Balkans


AN ENCYCLOPEDIC HISTORY FROM THE FALL
OF THE OTTOMAN EMPIRE TO THE BREAKUP
OF YUGOSLAVIA

Richard C. Hall, Editor

Copyright 2014 by ABC-CLIO, LLC


All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval
system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical,
photocopying, recording, or otherwise, except for the inclusion of brief quotations in a
review, without prior permission in writing from the publisher.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
War in the Balkans : an encyclopedic history from the fall of the Ottoman Empire to the breakup
of Yugoslavia / Richard C. Hall, editor.
pages cm
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 9781610690300 (hard copy : alk. paper) ISBN 9781610690317 (ebook)
1. Balkan PeninsulaHistory, Military20th centuryEncyclopedias. I. Hall, Richard C.
(Richard Cooper), 1950 editor.
DR45.W37 2014
2014014296
949.60 0403dc23
ISBN: 9781610690300
EISBN: 9781610690317
18 17 16 15 14

1 2 3 4 5

This book is also available on the World Wide Web as an eBook.


Visit www.abc-clio.com for details.
ABC-CLIO, LLC
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This book is printed on acid-free paper
Manufactured in the United States of America

As ever for
Audrey

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Contents

List of Maps, xiii

Balkan Entente, 1934, 20

Preface, xv

Balkan League, 20

Introduction, xvii

Balkan Pact, 1954, 21


Balkan War, First, 19121913, 22

REFERENCE ENTRIES

Balkan War, Second, 1913, 26

Abdulhamid II (18421918), 1

Balkan Wars, 19121913, Causes, 28

Adrianople, Siege of, 19121913, 2

Balkan Wars, 19121913, Consequences, 31

Adrianople, Treaty of, 1829, 3


Albania, Italian Occupation of, 1939, 3

Balkan Wars, 19121913, Naval


Campaigns, 32

Albania in the Balkan Wars, 5

Balli Kombetar, 33

Albania in World War I, 7

Berlin, Treaty of, 1878, 34

Albania in World War II, 8

Bessarabia, 35

Albanian Uprisings, 19101911, 10

Bihac, 36

Alexander I, King of Yugoslavia


(18881934), 11

Black Hand, 36
Black Sea Campaign, 19411944, 37

Alexander Obrenovic, King of Serbia


(18761903), 12

Boris III, Czar of Bulgaria (18941943), 39

Alexander of Battenberg, Prince of Bulgaria


(18571893), 13

Bosnia, Austrian Occupation, 1878, 40

Ali Pasha (1750?1822), 14

Bosnian Forces, 43

Antonescu, Ion (18821946), 15

Bosnian Revolt, 1876, 44

Austria-Hungary in the Balkans during


World War I, 16

Bosnian War, 19921995, 45

Bosnian Crisis, 19081909, 41

Brioni Agreement, 47

Averescu, Alexandru (18591938), 18

vii

viii

Contents

Bucharest, Treaty of, 1913, 47

Dayton Peace Accords, 1995, 91

Bucharest, Treaty of, 1918, 48

Dimitriev, Radko (18591918), 92

Bukovina, 49

Dimitrijevic, Dragutin (18761917), 93

Bulgaria in the Balkan Wars, 50

Djilas, Milovan (19111995), 94

Bulgaria in World War I, 53

Dobro Pole, Battle of, 1918, 95

Bulgaria in World War II, 57

Dobrudja, 96

Bulgarian Fatherland War, 19441945, 58

Dodecanese Campaign, 1944, 97

Bulgarian Horrors, 1876, 59

Doiran, Battles of, 19151918, 98

Bulgarian-Serb War, 1885, 60

EAM/ELAS, 100

Carol I, King of Romania (18391914), 62

EDES, 101

Carol II, King of Romania (18931953), 63

Enver Pasha (18821922), 102

Ceausescu, Nicolae (19181989), 64

Epirus, 104

Cer Mountain, Battle of, 1914, 66

Ferdinand I, Czar of Bulgaria


(18611948), 106

Cetniks, 67
Chataldzha, Battle of, 1912, 68
Cherniaev, M. G. (18241898), 70
Cold War in the Balkans, 70
Constantine I, King of Greece
(18681923), 73
Constantinople, Treaty of, 1913, 75
Contested Zone (Macedonia), 1912, 75
Corfu Channel Incident, 1946, 76
Corfu Declaration, 1917, 77
Corfu Incident, 1923, 78
Cretan Crisis, 1896, 79
Crete, Battle of, 1941, 80
Crimean War, Balkan Operations, 82
Croat Forces, 19911995, 83
Croat War, 19911995, 84
Cypriot Civil War, 1963, 87
Cyprus War, 1974, 88

Fiume/Rijeka, 19191924, 106


Gallipoli, 1915, 108
Germany in the Balkans during World
War I, 111
Germany in the Balkans during World
War II, 113
Greco-Italian War, 19401941, 116
Greco-Ottoman War, 1897, 118
Greco-Turkish War, 19191922, 119
Greece, Invasion of, 1941, 120
Greece in the Balkan Wars, 122
Greece in World War I, 123
Greece in World War II, 125
Greek Civil War, 129
Greek Military Coup, 1909, 132
Greek War of Independence,
18211832, 133

Contents

Greens (Montenegro), 134

Macedonian Front, 19151918, 176

Handschar SS Division, 135

Macedonian War, 2001, 178

Herzegovina Revolt, 1875, 136

Mahmud II, Ottoman Sultan (17851839), 180

The Holocaust in the Balkans, 137

Mahmud Muhtar Pasha (18661935), 182

Horseshoe, Operation, 1998, 141

Marasesti, Battle of, 1917, 184

Hoxha, Enver (19081985), 142

Mehmet Ali (17691849), 185

Ilinden Uprising, 1903, 144

Metaxas, Ioannis (18711941), 186

Iron Guard, 145

Michael I, King of Romania (1921), 187

Italy in the Balkans during World War I, 146

Mihailov, Ivan (18961990), 187

Italy in the Balkans during World War II,


148

Mihajlovic, Dragoljub Draza (1893


1946), 188

Izetbegovic, Alija (19252003), 150

Military League (Bulgaria), 189

Janina, Siege of, 19121913, 153

Milosevic, Slobodan (19412006), 190

JNA (Yugoslav Peoples Army), 154

Mladic, Ratko (1943), 192

Kalimantsi, Battle of, 1913, 157

Montenegro in Balkan Events,


18761878, 193

Karadzic, Radovan (1945), 157


Karageorge (George Petrovic;
17681818), 158
Kemal, Mustafa (18811938), 160
Kosovo, Battle of, 1915, 162
Kosovo Liberation Army, 163
Kosovo War, 19981999, 164
Kumanovo, Battle of, 1912, 166
Lake Prespa, Battle of, 1917, 168
Lausanne, Treaty of, 1923, 169
Levski, Vasil (18371873), 170
Little Entente, 171
London, Treaty of, 1913, 172
Lyule BurgasBuni Hisar,
Battle of, 1912, 173
Macedonia, 174

Montenegro in the Balkan Wars, 194


Montenegro in World War I, 195
National Schism (Greece),
19161917, 197
NATO in the Balkans, 198
Navarino, Battle of, 1827, 199
Nedic, Milan (18771946), 201
Neuilly, Treaty of, 1920, 203
Nikola I, King of Montenegro
(18411921), 204
North Atlantic Treaty Organization, 205
Novi Pazar, Sanjak of, 207
Obrenovic, Milan (18541901), 209
Obrenovic, Milos (17801860), 210
Odessa, Siege of, 1941, 210

ix

Contents

Ottoman Counterinsurgency Operations in


the Balkans and Crete, 212
Ottoman Empire, 214
Ottoman Empire in the Balkan Wars, 215
Ottoman Empire in World War I, 220
Papandreou, George (18881968), 223
Partisans, Albania, 224
Partisans, Bulgaria, 225
Partisans, Yugoslavia, 226
Pavelic, Ante (18891959), 227
Pleven, Siege of, 1877, 228
Ploesti, Bombing of, 19431944, 229
Princip, Gavrilo (18941918), 231

San Stefano, Treaty of, 1878, 264


Sarajevo, Siege of, 19921995, 265
Sarajevo Assassination, 1914, 266
Sarkoy and Baloyir, Battles of, 1913, 267
Savov, Mihail (18571928), 268
Scutari, Siege of, 19121913, 269
Selim III (17611808), 270
Serbia, Invasions of, 1914, 271
Serbia, Invasions of, 1915, 272
Serbia and the Balkan Wars, 274
Serbia in World War I, 277
Serbian Retreat, 1915, 280

Putnik, Radomir (18471917), 232

Serbian War of Independence,


18041817, 281

Radomir Rebellion, 1918, 236

Serbo-Ottoman War, 1876, 283

Romania, Invasion of, 1916, 237

Se`vres, Treaty of, 1920, 284

Romania, Invasion of, 1944, 238

Shipka Pass, Battles of, 18771878, 286

Romania in the Balkan Wars, 240

Skanderbeg SS Division, 287

Romania in World War I, 242

Slivnitsa, Battle of, 1885, 288

Romania in World War II, 245

Slovene War, 1991, 289

Romanian Campaign in Hungary, 1919, 248

Smyrna, Destruction of, 1922, 291

Romanian Campaign in Hungary,


19441945, 249

Srebrenica Massacre, 1995, 292

Romanian Coup, August 1944, 250


Romanian Peasant Uprising, 251
Russo-Ottoman War, 18061812, 252
Russo-Ottoman War, 18281829, 254
Russo-Ottoman War, 18771878, 256
Saint-Germain, Treaty of, 1919, 259
Sakarya River, Battle of, 1921, 261
Salonika, 262

Stalingrad, Battle of, 19421943, 293


Stamboliski, Aleksandur (18791923), 297
Stepanovic, Stepa (18561929), 298
Storm, Operation, 1995, 299
Suleyman Husnu Pasha (18381892), 300
Tepelene, Ali Pasha (17441822), 303
Tito, Josip Broz (18921980), 305
Transnistrian War, 307
Trianon, Treaty of, 1920, 308

Contents

Trieste Dispute, 310

Yugoslavia, 337

Truman Doctrine, 311

Yugoslavia, Axis Occupation Forces in


World War II, 340

Tsolakoglou, Georgios (18861948), 313


Tudjman, Franjo (19221999), 314
UNPROFOR, 316
Ustasa, 317
Vance-Owen Plan, 1993, 319
Vaphiadis, Markos (19061992), 320
Venizelos, Eleutherios (18641936), 321
Vienna Award, Second, 322
Vladimirescu, Tudor (17801821), 324
VMRO, 325

Yugoslavia, Collaborationist Forces in


World War II, 342
Yugoslavia, Invasion of, 1941, 345
Yugoslavia in World War II, 347
Yugoslav Military Coup, 351
Yugoslav Overflight Incidents, 1946, 353
Yugoslav-Soviet Split, 353
Yugoslav Wars, 19911995, 355
Yugoslav Wars, 19911995, Causes, 358

Vukovar, Siege of, 1991, 327

Yugoslav Wars, 19911995,


Consequences, 360

Warsaw Pact, 328

Zhekov, Nikola (18641949), 364

World War II Peace Settlement in the


Balkans, 331

Zog, King of the Albanians


(18951961), 365

Young Turks, 334


Ypsilantis, Alexander (17921828), 336

Chronology, 367
Bibliography, 371
Editor and Contributors, 375
Topical Index, 379
Categorical Index, 387
General Index, 393
About the Editor, 411

xi

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List of Maps

Contemporary Balkans, xxi


Bosnia and Herzegovina, xxii
Croatia, xxiii
Serbia, xxiv
The Balkans, 18781913, 29
Bosnian Genocide, 19921995, 46
Dardanelles/Gallipoli Campaign, 1915, 109
Ottoman Empire, 1877, 217
Balkan Front, 19141918, 278
Yugoslavia, 1945, 348

xiii

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Preface

Southeastern Europe, also known as the


Balkan Peninsula, has a distinct geography.
It is bordered on the west, south, and east
by significant bodies of water, the Adriatic
Sea, the Aegean Sea, and the Black Sea,
respectively. In general, the reverse S of
the southern part of the Carpathian mountain
system provides a northern border. The
topography of much of the interior is irregular. The Danube River system provides a
unifying route through much of the region.
The Balkan Peninsula has long maintained a political and cultural identity
distinct from that of Western Europe. The
major defining characteristics were established by the split in Christian ideology in
the eleventh century and the Ottoman
conquest in the fifteenth century. Afterward,
the Balkan Peninsula was largely under the
political control of the Ottoman Empire
from its capital in the ancient imperial city
of Constantinople, and under the cultural
direction of the Orthodox Church, also
based in Constantinople.
Any precise characterization of this
region is very difficult. For purposes of this
volume, the Balkan Peninsula is defined as
that part of southeastern Europe that is
largely Orthodox Christian or Muslim
culturally south of the mountain divide.
This includes the modern states of Albania,
Bosnia, Bulgaria, Greece, Macedonia,

Montenegro, Romania, Serbia, and Turkey.


Other areas that at the time were in political
arrangements with Balkan partners, such as
Croatia and Slovenia, are dealt with only in
the context of those arrangements.
By the beginning of the nineteenth
century, western European ideas based
upon Enlightenment principles had begun
to intrude into southeastern Europe. The
influx of concepts such as reason, rights of
man, and nationalism caused major disruptions throughout the region. The peoples of
the Balkans sought to emulate the perceived
successes of the western European national
states. Conflict and war marked the nineteenth and twentieth centuries in the Balkans as the inhabitants adopted national
identities and sought political arrangements
to conform to those identities. Inevitably
these national conflicts attracted the attention of the European Great Powers, who
sought economic and political advantage
from them. This process continued on into
the twentieth century and the cataclysms of
World War I, World War II, and the Cold
War. This volume is intended as a guide to
these conflicts in this region.
All dates in this volume are according to
the Western or Gregorian calendar, even
though it did not come into general usage
in the region until the early twentieth
century. Transliterations from Cyrillic are

xv

xvi

Preface

based upon the Library of Congress system.


Place names are generally given according
to the most common usage, although I have
made an effort to include alternative place
namesi.e., Scutari (Shkode r). Other
names are given according to their time

referencei.e., Constantinople until 1923,


and Istanbul afterward. I have attempted to
be consistent throughout the locations and
names of the peoples of the Balkans. I take
full responsibility for any errors of fact or
interpretation that appear here.

Introduction

Ottoman domination of southeastern


Europe, often referred to as the Balkans,
began in the fourteenth century. Initial
Ottoman rule provided relative peace and
stability for the region for the next three centuries. This was the pax ottomanica, or the
Ottoman Peace. The long Ottoman decline
began after the Ottoman defeat outside the
city of Vienna in 1683. Throughout the
eighteenth century, Ottoman control of
southeastern Europe receded. This permitted
the intrusion of Enlightenment ideas from
Western Europe at the end of the eighteenth
century. The concept of nationalism,
imported from Western Europe, in particular
caused desires for political change throughout the Balkans. Its influence would provide
the main basis for conflict in southeastern
Europe, lasting throughout the nineteenth
and twentieth centuries. At first the selfidentified nationalities of the Balkans, first
the Serbs, then the Greeks, Romanians,
Bulgarians, and finally the Albanians all
sought to obtain national states, mainly at
the expense of Ottoman rule.
This process lasted throughout the nineteenth century. It began in 1804 with the
Serbian revolt. Although initially the Serbs
acted to redress local wrongs, their revolt
soon assumed nationalist overtones. By
1818, Ottoman authorities in Constantinople
acknowledged the autonomous status of a

small region around Belgrade. Gradually


the Ottoman government granted additional
privileges, which culminated in full
independence at the Congress of Berlin in
1878.
Next, the Greeks sought complete separation from Ottoman authority. Their revolt
against Ottoman rule started in 1821. By
1827, the Greeks, with the help of the
Great Powers, obtained an independent
state. The borders of newly independent
Greece did not conform to the distribution
of Greek-speaking people in southeastern
Europe. Accordingly, the government in
Athens adopted a policy of irredentism.
The withdrawal of the Russians from the
Danubian principalities of Moldavia and
Wallachia in 1856 and the unification of the
principalities under the same prince that
same year marked the establishment of
Romania. The formal end of Ottoman
suzerainty at Berlin in 1878 established a
fully independent Romania.
Due to their proximity to the Ottoman
capital, the Bulgarians were slower to
develop a national movement. A nationalist
revolt against Ottoman rule in 1876 failed.
This failure, however, attracted Russian
sympathy and support. The Russians intervened against the Ottomans the next year,
initiating the Russo-Ottoman War of 1877
1878. The Russian victory in that conflict

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Introduction

established a Bulgarian state that technically


remained under Ottoman suzerainty.
Through the Treaty of Berlin of 1878, the
Great European Powers confirmed the borders of the Bulgarian principality as well as
the independence of Montenegro, Romania,
and Serbia.
The Treaty of Berlin satisfied none of the
Balkan states. All sought unification with
their co-nationals in the Ottoman Empire
and, in the case of the Romanians and
Serbs, also those living in Austria-Hungary.
The Romanians additionally recognized a
Romanian minority within the borders of
the Russian Empire in Bessarabia. Sometimes, as in the case of Ottoman Macedonia,
the aspirations of the Balkan states overlapped. After 1878, all of the Balkan states
attempted to realize their national ambitions. National unification was perceived as
the necessary basis for further economic
and political development. National rivalries, however, precluded unified action by
the Balkan states against the Ottomans.
The Young Turk Coup in Constantinople
in 1908, with its stated goals of military
and political reform, motivated the leaders
of the Balkan states to begin diplomatic
talks for a Balkan alliance. They recognized
that they would be less likely to realize their
nationalist agendas at the expense of a revitalized Ottoman Empire. The outbreak of
the Italian-Ottoman war in 1911 provided
further incentive for a Balkan Alliance. In
the fall of 1912, a Balkan League was
formed. It was really a loose series of bilateral agreements.
In October 1912, in the First Balkan War,
the Balkan League overwhelmed the Ottoman Empire. By the spring of 1913, the
Ottoman Europe was limited to a bit of
territory in front of Constantinople and a
part of the Gallipoli Peninsula. In December 1912, an independent Albania emerged

from the wreckage of the Ottoman Empire.


This weak state soon became the object of
contention from its Greek, Montenegrin,
and Serbian neighbors.
The Balkan allies failed to find a formula
for the division of the conquered Ottoman
territories. Consequently, in the summer of
1913, Bulgaria confronted its erstwhile
allies primarily because of disputes over
Macedonia. The ensuing Second Balkan
War was brief but bloody. While Bulgarian
forces were deployed against the Greeks
and Serbs, the Ottomans and Romanians
seized the opportunity to invade Bulgaria
from the southeast and northeast. After a
month of fighting, the Bulgarians sued for
peace. They surrendered territory to all of
the surrounding states.
Even though Austro-Hungarian and Italian objections had barred Serbia from access
to the Adriatic, Serbian troops continued to
maintain a presence in the new state of
Albania after the Balkan Wars. The antagonism between Austria-Hungary and Serbia
continued through 1913 and into 1914. One
consequence was the Sarajevo assassination
on June 28, 1914.
For the Balkan peoples, World War I was
a continuation of the fighting that had
begun in the autumn of 1912. Three
Austro-Hungarian invasions of Serbia in
1914 failed. When the Austro-Hungarians
returned in 1915, they had assistance from
the Bulgarians and the Germans. Bulgarians
were eager to obtain Macedonia, which they
had lost in the Balkan Wars. The Central
Powers quickly overran Serbia and neighboring Montenegro. In an effort to help the
beleaguered Serbs, British and French
forces landed at Salonika. The Bulgarians,
however, stopped and contained them at the
Greek frontier. The war divided Greece into
supporters of the Entente and advocates of
neutrality. This lasted until the summer of

Introduction

1917, when the interventionists, with British


and French military assistance, ousted neutralist King Constantine. Afterward, Greek
troops deployed on the Macedonian Front
alongside the British, French, Italian, and
Serbian forces.
The Romanians had joined the Entente in
the summer of 1916. They quickly advanced
into Austro-Hungarian territory. A rapid
Central Powers counterattack thrust deeply
into Romania. The Russian revolution left
Romania isolated and forced the Romanian
government to accede to terms with the
Central Powers.
An Entente offensive undertaken on
September 15, 1918, broke through the
Bulgarian lines at Dobro Pole. The Bulgarians,
exhausted after six years of intermittent war,
collapsed and sued for peace. The Ottomans
followed soon afterward. In November 1918,
Serbian troops, advancing north from the
Macedonian Front, finally returned to their
homeland. At the same time, Romania
rejoined the Entente.
The conclusion of World War I in
southeastern Europe did not end conflict
there. After a turbulent birth as a nation,
Albania increasingly came under Italian
control. Bulgaria, defeated for the second
time in five years, remained committed to
unification with Macedonia. Montenegro
disappeared into the new South Slav state,
officially called Yugoslavia after 1929.
Yugoslavia, together with the other two Balkan victors in World War I, Greece and
Romania, struggled to maintain the status
quo in the face of foreign and domestic
opposition. The former Ottoman Empire
was revitalized as a secular Turkey under
the leadership of the former Young Turk
Mustapha Kemal Ataturk (18811938).
The rise of Nazi Germany and its
demands for foodstuffs and raw materials
brought unprecedented prosperity to the

Balkan states. By the mid-1930s, they all


had strong economic ties with Germany. Bulgaria also was attracted to German revisionism. The failure of the British and French to
protect Czechoslovakia at Munich also made
clear to the Balkan states the fact of German
continental domination. By the time of the
outbreak of World War II in 1939, all of the
Balkan states were in some position of subservience to Nazi Germany. The only possible
exception was Albania, which Italy invaded
and annexed in April 1939. The seizure of
Romanian territory by Bulgaria, Hungary,
and Soviet Russia in the summer of 1940
served to emphasize German domination of
the region.
Actual fighting returned to the Balkans in
the fall of 1940 when Italian dictator Benito
Mussolini (18831945) sought to recreate
the Roman Empire by invading Greece
from Italian bases in Albania. Greek resistance soon pushed the invaders back into
Albania. The British hastened to send aid
to Greece. This attracted the attention of
the Germans, who were then planning their
invasion of Soviet Russia in the following
spring, Operation Barbarossa. Hitler decided
to eliminate this potential threat to the
southern flank of Operation Barbarossa. A
pro-British coup in Yugoslavia added
urgency to the German plans. In Operation
Marita, German troops swiftly overran
Yugoslavia and Greece. On the eve of Operation Barbarossa in June 1941, all of
southeastern Europe was under the control
of Nazi Germany or its Bulgarian, Hungarian, or Italian allies.
When the Germans invaded Soviet Russia
on June 22, 1941, they received considerable
aid in manpower and material from Romania.
Meanwhile, strong resistance against the
Germans and their collaborators began to
emerge in Greece and Yugoslavia. In both
places this developed into a three-sided

xix

xx

Introduction

conflict among collaborators, pro-Communist


resistance, and anti-Communist resistance. At
the same time, deep in Soviet Russia, the Romanian army shared in the disaster at Stalingrad.
By the summer of 1944, the Red Army was at
the eastern approaches of the Balkans while
the Communist resistance forces in Greece
and Yugoslavia were winning the conflicts
against both the collaborators and the antiCommunists. At the end of the summer, first
Romania and then Bulgaria changed sides,
and began to fight alongside the Red Army.
The Germans undertook a long retreat out of
Greece, Albania, and Yugoslavia.
The victorious Red Army then imposed
Soviet-style regimes in Bulgaria and Romania. The triumphant Partisans of Josip Broz
Tito (18921980) did the same thing in
Yugoslavia and Albania. Tito, however,
came to resent the Soviet presence in his
country, and in 1948, he broke off his connections to them. The Albanians utilized
this Yugoslav-Soviet break to rid themselves
of the Yugoslavs. Meanwhile in Greece, the
three-sided fighting of World War II had
morphed into a civil war between pro- and
anti-Communist forces. By 1950, the antiCommunist forces had prevailed in this
conflict, due in part to the considerable
quantities of aid from the United States and
other Western countries.
The next three decades were relatively
quiet in the Balkans. Greece and Turkey
joined the Western military alliance NATO,
while Bulgaria and Romania adhered to the
Soviet-backed Warsaw Pact. Yugoslavia
and, after 1961, Albania remained outside
of the Cold War organizations. Ideology triumphed over nationalism, at least for the
time being. The pax sovietica replicated the
pax ottomanica that had prevailed in
the region up until the nineteenth century.
The death of Tito on May 4, 1980, and the
decline of Soviet power through the

subsequent decade allowed dormant Balkan


nationalisms to revive. Communist regimes
in Bulgaria and Romania quickly collapsed
at the end of 1989. While the Bulgarian Communists conceded power with little resistance,
the Communist regime in Romania fell with
considerable violence. In 1992, the end of
the isolated Communist government in Albania attracted little world notice. This was
mainly because neighboring Yugoslavia was
undergoing ideological and national collapse.
The adhesive qualities of Titoism had eroded
considerably over the 10 years after the Yugoslav dictators death. A particularly virulent
nationalism revived throughout Yugoslavia.
A series of bloody wars tore the state apart.
By 1996, Yugoslavia had dissolved into its
national components, with Montenegro and
Serbia still maintaining a loose confederation.
By 2010, not only had the MontenegrinSerbian arrangement ended, but Kosovo had
declared its independence from Serbia. Out
of the six federal states of Titoist Yugoslavia
had emerged seven independent states.
In the aftermath of the nationalist revival
in southeastern Europe, all of the new governments sought inclusion in wider European organizations. Greece and Turkey had
been members of NATO since the Cold
War, and Greece was one of the original
members of the European Union. Bulgaria
and Romania joined NATO in 2004 and the
European Union in 2007. As of this writing,
the other Balkan states are all in the process
of joining both of these international organizations. After two tumultuous centuries
of nationalist conflict in southeastern
Europe, full admission and participation in
international organizations offers at last
some expectations of peace and prosperity
for the region. These were exactly the same
goals the Balkan peoples had anticipated
gaining with the achievement of national
unity.

xxii

xxiii

xxiv

A
Abdulhamid II (18421918)

for the people there, and during his reign


the Hejaz Railroad was constructed to
Medina and Mecca.
Abdulhamid strongly opposed Zionist
aspirations for a state in Palestine, however.
This was at least in part because he feared
that resulting increased immigration from
the European states, especially from
Turkeys historic enemy Russia, would lead
to expanded European influence in the
empire. Following expanded Jewish emigration from Russia after the 1881 pogroms, in
1882 Abdulhamid prohibited Jewish immigration to Palestine. He rescinded the order
in 1883 but reinstated it in 1891. Nonetheless, the regulations against immigration
were not stringently enforced, and Jews
were still able to settle in Palestine.
In June 1896 Abdulhamid awarded
Zionist leader Theodor Herzl (18601904)
the Commanders Cross of the Majidiyya
Order. In May 1891 the sultan received
Herzl in private audience, although this
brought no tangible advantages to Zionism.
Abdulhamid rejected Herzls effort to secure
a charter that would have established an
autonomous Jewish settlement in Palestine
in return for cash payments to help reduce
the Turkish national debt. Abdulhamid suggested instead that Jewish immigrants settle
in various parts of the Ottoman Empire.
Dissatisfaction with the continued deterioration of the Ottoman domestic situation
coupled with crumbling frontiers brought
the rise of the Young Turk movement and
the Revolution of 1908. Suspected of sympathies with a counterrevolutionary coup

Ottoman sultan, the son of Sultan Abdulmecid, Abdulhamid was born on September 21,
1842. He succeeded to the throne on the
deposition of his brother Murad on
August 31, 1876, and ruled until April 27,
1909. Abdulhamid II enjoyed near absolutist
rule. He attempted to carry out reforms, but
these latter proved impossible. His reign
came to be marked by war, internal violence, upheaval, and pressure on the empire
from outside powers. A revolt occurred in
Bosnia and Herzegovina in 1875, and
war with Serbia and Montenegro followed,
leading to Russian intervention and the
Russo-Ottoman War of 18771878. The latter was a disaster for the empire, although
the harsh effects of the Treaty of San
Stefano were somewhat mitigated by the
1878 Congress of Berlin. In gratitude
for Londons assistance at that conference,
Turkey ceded Cyprus to Britain in 1878. In
1881, the French seized Tunis in North
Africa, and in 1882, British forces occupied
Egypt. Despite the Ottoman wartime victory
over Greece in 1897, the Great Powers
insisted that Turkey yield Crete.
Abdulhamid pursued a surprisingly
liberal policy toward the Jews. In 1876, he
allowed Jews of the empire full equality
before the law. Jews were elected to the
Ottoman Parliament, and Abdulhamid
named two Jews as senators. Another Jew
was made an admiral in the Turkish navy.
In Palestine, Abdulhamid introduced administrative reforms that improved the situation

Adrianople, Siege of, 19121913

attempt of April 23, 1909, Abdulhamid was


deposed on April 27. Banished to Salonika,
he was permitted to return to Istanbul in
1912 and passed his last years studying and
working at his hobby of carpentry. Abdulhamid died in Istanbul on February 10, 1918.
Spencer C. Tucker
See also: Berlin, Treaty of, 1878; RussoOttoman War, 18771878; San Stefano,
Treaty of, 1878; Young Turks

Further Reading
Fromkin, David. A Peace to End All Peace:
The Fall of the Ottoman Empire and the
Creation of the Modern Middle East. New
York: Avon, 1989.
Kent, Marian, ed. The Great Powers and the
End of the Ottoman Empire. London: Routledge, 1996.
Palmer, Alan. The Decline and Fall of the
Ottoman Empire. London: John Murray,
1992.

Adrianople, Siege of, 19121913


The siege of Adrianople (Turkish: Edirne,
Bulgarian: Odrin) was a protracted engagement during the First Balkan War that
began in October 1912 when the Bulgarian
Second Army blocked the Ottoman fortress
city of Adrianople and ended on March 26,
1913, when the Bulgarian Second Army
together with the allied Serbian Second
Army succeeded in taking the city.
Adrianople was the city in Thrace. In
1912, it had a mixed largest population of
around 76,000, of whom about half were
Turkish and the other half Armenians, Greeks,
Jews, and others. At the start of the war it was
not initially a major Bulgarian objective. The
Ottomans had fortified Adrianople as a
forward defensive position to protect Constantinople. The fortifications at Adrianople

consisted of two lines of fortified positions surrounding the city. The garrison consisted of
52,597 men and officers, under the command
of Ferik Mehmed Sukru Pasha (1857-1916).
Initially the Bulgarians intended only to
employ their Second Army under General
Nikola Ivanov to screen Adrianople to prevent
Ottoman forces from the garrison from attacking the flanks of the main Bulgarian force
moving east of the city toward Constantinople.
After the Bulgarian success at Lozengrad, the
Bulgarians decided to initiate a siege. Soon
afterward the Russians indicated that they
would not object to a Bulgarian presence there.
At the time of the December armistice,
the Bulgarians had surrounded the city and
subjected it to regular artillery bombardments. They also had called upon their Serbian allies for help. By November 12 the
Serbian Second Army under the command
of General Stepa Stepanovic had arrived to
augment Bulgarian forces. The Balkan allies
remained in place during the armistice.
After the Ottomans denounced the armistice, the Bulgarians resumed their bombardments. Additional Serbian artillery
arrived in February. On March 24 the Bulgarians and Serbs began an infantry assault
on the Ottoman positions. By March 26
they had taken the center of the city and
accepted the surrender of Sukru Pasha.
Victory came at a high cost. The Bulgarians lost 18,282 men in the siege. The
Ottomans lost about 15,000 in siege operations and around 60,000 were taken prisoner. Civilian casualties in the city due to
the bombardment as well as to disease
and lack of food resources undoubtedly
increased Ottoman losses. The Bulgarian
success was short lived. Fighting in Macedonia against their erstwhile Greek and
Serbian allies during the Second Balkan
War forced them to transfer most of their
troops to the west. The small Bulgarian

Albania, Italian Occupation of, 1939

garrison remaining in Adrianople was


unable to contest control of the city when
Ottoman forces returned. The Ottomans
reoccupied Adrianople on July 23 without
firing a shot. The Bulgarian occupation of
Adrianople had lasted about as long as the
Bulgarian siege.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Balkan War, First, 19121913; Balkan War, Second, 1913; Bulgaria in the Balkan
Wars; Ottoman Empire in the Balkan Wars

Further Reading
Erickson, Edward J. Defeat in Detail: The
Ottoman Army in the Balkans, 19121913.
Westport, CT: Praeger, 2003.

collection of taxes in return for Serbian payment of a fixed annual tribute to the sultan.
They also accepted the autonomy of the
Principalities of Moldavia and Wallachia
under Russian protection and fixed the border between the Ottoman Empire and Wallachia on the thalweg of the Danube. The
Porte also recognized the autonomy of
Greece, which achieved full independence
in 1830. Russia was granted the same capitulatory rights enjoyed by the subjects of
other European states. The treaty opened
the Dardanelles to all commercial vessels
and Russia was granted the same capitulatory rights enjoyed by other European states.
Alexander Mikaberidze

Hall, Richard C. The Balkan Wars, 1912


1913: Prelude to the First World War. London: Routledge, 2000.

See also: Greek War of Independence, 1821


1832; Russo-Ottoman War, 18281829

Vachkov, Alexander. The Balkan War, 1912


1913. Sofia: Angela, 2005.

Further Reading

Adrianople, Treaty of, 1829

Karsh, Inari. Empires of the Sand: The Struggle for Mastery in the Middle East, 1789
1923. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University
Press, 2001.

The treaty concluding the Russo-Ottoman


War of 18281829 was signed on September 14, 1829, in Adrianople by Russias
Count Aleksey Orlov (17871862) and by
the Ottoman Empires Abdul Kadyr-Bey.
Russia, whose forces had advanced as far
as Adrianople during the war, abandoned
most of its conquests beyond the Danube
but gained territory at the mouth of the Danube and acquired substantial territories in
the Caucasus and southern Georgia. The
Porte recognized Russias possession of
western Georgia and of the Khanates of Yerivan and Nakhichevan, which had been
ceded to Russia by Iran in the Treaty of
Turkmenchay (1828). The Ottomans recognized the autonomy of Serbia and agreed to
the removal of their troops except for the
frontier garrisons, and the end of Ottoman

Finkel, Caroline. Osmans Dream: The Story


of the Ottoman Empire, 13001923. New
York: Basic Books, 2006.

Albania, Italian Occupation


of, 1939
Fascist Italy occupied Albania in April 1939
after years of Italian political and economic
domination. After Benito Mussolini came
to power in Italy in 1922, he dreamed of
establishing a new Roman Empire around
the Mediterranean Sea (Mare Nostrum).
Albania had been part of the Roman Empire,
and several Italian states had influenced and
controlled portions of Albania during part of
the Middle Ages. Additionally, the Italian
Fascists claimed that the Albanians were
ethnically linked to the Italians, not to the

Albania, Italian Occupation of, 1939

Slavs of the Balkans, since prehistoric times.


In addition, direct control of Albania would
give Italy an important beachhead in the
Balkans for a possible invasion of Yugoslavia or Greece and provide Italy with complete control of the Strait of Otranto and the
entrance to the Adriatic Sea. The Fascists
used these tenuous cultural, historical, and
ethnic claims to justify Italys right to
dominate and eventually possess Albania.
By the mid-1930s, the Fascist regime
dominated Albania politically and economically. It had granted Albanias ruler, King
Zog I, several loans, making Albania economically dependent on Italy. In exchange
for Italys continued support of Albania,
Mussolini demanded that Zog allow all new
appointees to Albanian government positions
to receive an Italian education and allow an
Italian expert into all Albanian government
ministries (18951961). Furthermore, Italy
assumed control of Albanias fortifications,
and Italian officers replaced the British officers who were training Albanias gendarmerie. In addition, Albania had to abrogate its
existing commercial treaties with other countries, make no new agreements without the
approval of the Italian government, and sign
a treaty granting Italy most favored country
status in trade.
By 1939, the Fascist regime decided to
physically occupy Albania although Albania
had been a de facto Italian protectorate since
1927. Mussolini wanted direct control to
increase his own prestige and provide a
response to Hitlers annexation of Austria
and occupation of Czechoslovakia. On
March 25, Mussolini sent the Albanian
government an ultimatum, demanding it to
accede to Italys occupation of the country.
King Zog refused, and, on April 7, 1939,
Italian troops invaded Albania. They completed the occupation by April 10 after

a short and ineffective Albanian resistance.


On April 9, King Zog with his family fled
to Greece.
On April 12, the Albanian parliament
voted to offer the Albanian crown to the
Italian king, Victor Emmanuel III, who
appointed Francesco Jacomoni di San
Savino (18931973), a former ambassador
to Albania, as his viceroy to govern Albania.
The Fascist government also established a
customs union between Italy and Albania,
and Rome assumed control of Albanias foreign policy. The Albanian armed forces
became part of the Italian military, and
Italian advisors were placed inside all levels
of the Albanian government.
The Italian Fascist regime established an
Albanian Fascist Party and subordinate organizations as a branch of the National Fascist
Party of Italy, and its members took an oath
to obey the orders of Il Duce (Mussolini).
The Italian Fascist regime resettled Italians
in Albania as colonists who, it hoped, would,
in time, gradually transform it into Italian
soil. Albania remained an autonomous part
of the Italian Empire until September 1943,
when Italy surrendered to the Allies. At that
time, German forces occupied Albania until
November 1944 when Albanian resistance
fighters liberated their country.
Robert B. Kane
See also: Hoxha, Enver (19081985); Partisans, Albania; Zog, King of the Albanians
(18951961).

Further Reading
Barclay, Glen St. John. The Rise and Fall of
the New Roman Empire: Italys Bid for
World Power, 18901943. London: Sidgwick and Jackson, 1973.
Fischer, Bernd J. Albania at War, 19391945.
West Lafayette, IN: Purdue University
Press, 1999.

Albania in the Balkan Wars


Hibbert, Reginald. Albanias National Liberation Struggle: The Bitter Victory. London:
Pinter Publishers, 1991.
Villari, Luigi. Italian Foreign Policy under
Mussolini. New York, Devin-Adair Co.,
1956.

Albania in the Balkan Wars


Not long after the conclusion of the
Albanian Rebellions of 19101912, the
First Balkan War broke out. The Albanian
territories of the Ottoman Empire became
the objective of several campaigns of the
Balkan League. Additionally, northern
Albania was the first Ottoman territory
attacked by the Balkan League. Montenegro
launched an offensive and officially
declared war on October 8, 1912. Previous
to this there had been nearly constant crossborder raiding by both states ever since the
Albanian Rebellions of 19101912. Serbia
moved into the Kosova Vilayet, considered
by Albanians in the period to a part of
Albania, in the middle of October 1912.
Greece moved against Albania on October
18, 1912.
The Balkan Wars, coming as they did in
the aftermath of the Albanian Rebellions,
placed many Albanians in a difficult position. Reactions to the incursions by the Balkan League from Albanians were mixed.
Scars from the Albanian Rebellions had yet
to heal and some Albanians welcomed the
war, hoping it would bring about Albanian
independence. Some of the Catholic tribes
of the Shkodra region, who had been given
refuge in 19101911 by Montenegro, cooperated with Montenegrin-Serbian forces.
Other Albanians rallied to the Ottoman
cause, often spurred on by accounts of real
or perceived atrocities committed by the
Balkan League. Isa Boletini (18641916),

who had vigorously opposed the Ottoman


government months before, now organized
Albanian military units in Kosova and
opposed the Serbian offensive.

Opening Phases
In early October, Montenegrin units came in
force across the border and encountered stiff
Ottoman resistance. Ottoman border positions were flanked and isolated, and by the
middle of October these border positions
surrendered. As Montenegrin forces moved
southward, they slowly pushed Ottoman
forces out. These moves opened the way to
Scutari, which was the Montenegrins principal objective. Serbian forces concentrated
their moves against the Kosova Vilayet. Serbian forces crashed into the ad hoc Ottoman
forces defending the Kosova frontier. Not
long thereafter, a Greek army moved toward
the Yanya (Janina) Vilayet and opened hostilities there.
The Siege of Scutari (Shkoder)
One of the principal events in Albania during
the Balkan Wars was the siege of Scutari,
which occurred from October 28, 1912, to
April 23, 1913in essence the entire duration
of the First Balkan War. In late October, a
joint Serbian-Montenegrin force surrounded
the city. Hasan Riza Pasha (18711913) and
Essad Pasha Topanti (18631920) were the
Ottoman commanders that directed the
defense of Scutari. With this, Scutari was cut
off from resupply and reinforcement. The initial Serbian-Montenegrin attacks did not
break the resolve of Ottoman forces in the
city. By early December, an armistice was
proposed. This armistice was agreed to in
principal by both parties, but it was almost
immediately violated. Ottoman authorities in
the city pressed the Great Powers for assistance in maintaining the armistice, but to no
avail. The armistice officially collapsed on

Albania in the Balkan Wars

February 3, 1913. Throughout the siege,


Montenegrin and Serbian forces launched
numerous offensives on Ottoman positions in
and around Scutari. These engagements
inflicted numerous casualties on both sides.
Eventually, after the assassination of Hasan
Riza Pasha, Essad Pasha Topanti negotiated
surrender, and Montenegrin forces entered
Scutari. Despite capturing the city, in
May 1913, Montenegro was obliged by most
of the Great Powers to evacuate Scutari.
Meanwhile, Serbian forces pushed southward
into central Albania.

Epirus
The Greek kingdoms principal goal in the
Albanian territories was Epirus, specifically
the city of Yanya. A series of three battles
for Yanya began on December 14, 1912,
and focused on the fortress on Mount Bijan
(Bizani), which controlled the approach to
the city of Yanya. Ottoman and Greek positions fluctuated back and forth. Eventually,
Greek forces, bolstered by the arrival of
reinforcements, made a final push, and on
March 6, 1913, Yanya surrendered and
Greek forces entered the city the same day.
Throughout March 1913, Greek forces
steadily pushed northward and faced fairly
disorganized Ottoman resistance in central
Albania.
Central Albania
After Serbian victory at the Battle of Manastir (Bitola) on November 20, 1912, the
remainder of the Ottoman army in Macedonia, often known as the Vardar Army, was
forced to retreat west into central Albania.
As Ottoman forces entered the region, an independent Albania was proclaimed and the
prospect of Albanian cooperation with the
Balkan League became a concern. This
joint action never materialized, and the
remnants of the Vardar Army organized

themselves around the city of Berat. Serbian


forces did press down on them from the
north and east, but the armistice of December 1912 was observed by the Serbs,
and this sector remained relatively quiet.
This quiet was shattered in the spring of
1913. With the fall of Yanya, in early
March 1913, what remained of the Ottoman
forces from Yanya made their way northward into central Albania. This was followed by the movement of Serbian forces
southward in the middle of March 1913.
Small delaying actions kept Ottoman forces
in the region from being totally encircled,
but just barely. Meanwhile, Serbian forces
again pushed down from the north. On
April 6, 1913, Ottoman and Serbian forces
fought the battle of Losne. The beleaguered
Ottomans were unable to keep the Serbs
out of Los ne or Berat, which fell a few
days later. Losne was the final battle of the
First Balkan War. The Vardar Army and
the remaining Ottoman forces in central
Albania were saved from a Greek-Serbian
pincer movement by an armistice in midApril 1913.

The Emergence of Albania


With the defeat of Ottoman forces, the possibility of remaining in the Ottoman Empire
disappeared; Albanian nationalism became
the only option. Albanias independence
was declared by an assembly held at Vlore
on November 28, 1912. The Treaty of
London confirmed Albanias independence
on May 30, 1912. Albanias status was not
altered by the Treaty of Bucharest of 1913
or any other postwar treaties, although the
new states existence was contested by the
Republic of Central Albania under Esad
Pasha Topanti, the former Ottoman commander at Scutari. This republic asserted its
own sovereignty during 19131914 but was
later incorporated into the rest of Albania.

Albania in World War I

The Greek-backed Autonomous Republic of


Northern Epirus also attempted to alter the
boundaries of the new Albanian state.
Later, after World War I, this state too was
incorporated into the new Albania.
James Tallon
See also: Albanian Uprisings, 19101911;
Balkan War, First, 19121913; Balkan Wars,
19121913, Causes; Janina, Siege of, 1912
1913; Scutari, Siege of, 19121913

Further Reading
Erickson, Edward. Defeat in Detail: The Ottoman Army in the Balkans, 19121913.
Westport, CT: Praeger, 2003.
Kiraly, Bela, and Dimitrije Djordjevic, eds.
East Central European Society and the Balkan Wars. New York: Columbia University
Press, 1987.
Hall, Richard C. The Balkan Wars, 1912
1913: Prelude to the First World War.
London: Routledge, 2000.
Hellenic Army General Staff. A Concise History of the Balkan Wars, 19121913.
Athens: Army History Directorate, 1998.
Treadway, John D. The Falcon and the Eagle:
Montenegro and Austria-Hungary, 1908
1914 .West Lafayette, IN: Purdue University Press, 1983.

Albania in World War I


Located in the Balkans on the Adriatic Sea,
Albania proclaimed its independence from
the Ottoman Empire (Turkey) in November 1912, following the First Balkan War.
This was confirmed by a conference of
ambassadors in London that December. Turkey officially renounced all rights there in
May 1913, and Albania was formally
granted independence as a Muslim principality in July.
The Great Powers agreed to the installation of Austro-Hungarian aristocrat Prince

Wilhelm zu Wied (18761945) as Albanian


ruler. He arrived in Albania in March 1914
but departed on September 3 after World
War I erupted. He lacked confidence that he
could maintain his government amidst the
fighting on the Balkan Peninsula. He realized that with the distractions of the war,
the Great Powers had little interest in maintaining him. During the war, he joined
the German army. On Wieds departure,
Albania reverted to anarchy. Throughout
the war, Albania had no real functioning
central government. The French established
the so called Republic of Korce in December 1916. The Italians and AustroHungarians also set up Albanian governments in conjunction with their occupations.
The Italian and Austro-Hungarian occupying authorities also established local structures and supported local armed bands.
These Albanian institutions, even though
under the sponsorship of foreign occupations, maintained the concept of Albanian
identity and even Albanian independence
during the war.
Although Albania sought to avoid
involvement in World War I, its neutrality
and sovereignty were alternately threatened
by Austria-Hungary, France, Italy, Germany,
Greece, Montenegro, and Serbia. Greek
troops occupied southern Albania beginning
in October 1914. In June 1915, Montenegrin
troops returned to Scutari (Shkoder), which
they had taken during the First Balkan War,
and Serbs reentered central Albania, where
they had maintained an armed presence
until the outbreak of World War I. Already
in November 1914, Italy, although officially
neutral, sent troops into the port of Vlore. In
the secret treaty of London of April 26,
1915, that secured Italys entry into the war
on their side, the Entente governments
promised Italy Vlore, the island of Sazan
(Saseno), and a protectorate over much of

Albania in World War II

the rest of Albania. Serbia and Greece were


to divide what remained.
In the fall of 1915, Serbian and Montenegrin forces, under pressure from AustroHungarian and Bulgarian armies, withdrew
across northern and central Albania. As
they retreated toward the Adriatic, the
Serbs and Montenegrins also came under
attack by local Albanian forces. In the second half of 1916, Italian troops drove the
Greeks from southern Albania and brought
almost all Albanian territory under their
control. Austrian forces invaded in
June 1916. In 1918, there was fighting in
Albania between Austro-Hungarian forces
on the one side and Italian, French, and
Greek forces on the other. AustroHungarian forces remained in Albania until
the end of the war.
Italian troops stayed on in Albania after
the war. Greek and Italian interests threatened the existence of Albania at the Paris
Peace Conference. The Greeks also sent
armed bands into southern Albanian
territory, which they called Northern
Epirus. Nevertheless, the Americans,
British, and French all supported the
reestablishment of Albanian independence.
After the conferees at the Paris Peace
Conference called on Italy to withdraw,
they did so in August 1920, following an
uprising in Albania and unrest in Italy. The
Congress of Lushnja, which began to meet
in January 1919 even before the final Italian
withdrawal, established a new government.
At the end of the Great War, Albania lay in
ruins. There was chaos and great suffering,
with 70,000 deaths from epidemics and
fighting out of a population of only 800,000
people.
In December 1920, Albania was admitted
to the League of Nations. It was declared a
republic on January 21, 1925, and its borders were formally established in 1926 as

those proclaimed by the London Conference


of 1913.
Gary Kerley
See also: Austria-Hungary in the Balkans
during World War I; Greece in World War I;
Montenegro in World War I; Serbia in World
War I; Serbian Retreat, 1915

Further Reading
Jacques, Edwin E. The Albanians: An Ethnic
History from Prehistoric Times to the
Present. Jefferson, NC: McFarland, 1995.
Pollo, Stefanaq, and Arben Puto. The History
of Albania from Its Origin to the Present
Day. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul,
1981.
Vickers, Miranda. The Albanians: A Modern
History. London: I. B. Tauris, 1999.

Albania in World War II


During World War II, Albania was the
springboard for the Italian invasion of
Greece and the scene of anti-Axis guerrilla
warfare. Having dominated Albania politically and economically for some time,
Italian dictator Benito Mussolini planned a
formal annexation of Albania in the spring
of 1939. Italian troops invaded the small
mountainous country on April 7, 1939, and
met only light resistance, although a small
force led by Colonel Abas Kupi (1892
1976) held the Italians at Durres (Durazzo)
for 36 hours, sufficient time for Albanian
King Zog (18951961), Queen Geraldine
(19152002), and their days-old heir Prince
Leka (19392011) to escape. They eventually arrived in Britain, where they spent the
war. Like his predecessor William of Wied
(18761945), Zog would never return to
Albania once he left the country. On
April 16, 1939, King Victor Emmanuel III
of Italy accepted the Albanian crown, and a

Albania in World War II

pro-fascist government was installed. Britain, still hoping to prevent an alliance


between Mussolini and Adolf Hitler,
acceded to the annexation, but the Greeks
prepared to resist an inevitable Italian invasion of their own country, which occurred
on October 28, 1940. The invading Italian
army contained some Albanian formations.
The invasion of Greece presented Albanian
nationalists with something of a quandary.
They relished the opportunity to gain the
parts of northwestern Greece containing an
Albanian population. On the other hand,
the Greek defeat of the Italian invasion and
subsequent occupation of southern Albania
presented Albanian nationalists with an
opportunity to throw off Italian control.
German intervention in the war on the Italian side the next year rendered the issue
moot. The Germans and Italians soon overran Yugoslavia and Greece. The defeat of
Greece and Yugoslavia brought additional
territories to Albania. Kosovo, parts of
western Macedonia, and northwestern
Greece (C
ame ra) were annexed. These
annexations were not unpopular either in
Albania proper or in the new territories.
Already, earlier in 1940, Britains Special
Operations Executive (SOE) had attempted
to create a united-front movement under
Abas Kupi and to stimulate a revolt against
the Italians in northern Albania. The effort
began well, but it faltered after the German
conquest of Yugoslavia. However, as Axis
fortunes waned in 1942, Albanian resistance
revived. Italian control became limited to
the major cities and the coastal regions.
In the mountains of southern Albania, the
Communists, encouraged by Josip Broz
Tito, leader of the Yugoslav Partisans, coalesced under Enver Hoxha (19081983).
Liberal landowners and intellectuals mainly
in the north formed the Balli Kombetar
(National Front) resistance movement. In

Albanian troops under Italian command in Tirana,


Albania, April 24, 1939. (Bettmann/Corbis)

central and northern Albania, Abas Kupi


and various tribal leaders also formed resistance groups. SOE agents Colonel Neil
McLean (19181986) and Major David
Smiley (19162009) were sent into southern
Albania, and they subsequently recommended that the British provide aid to both
Hoxhas partisans and the Balli Kombetar.
The disintegration of the Italian forces
in Albania following the overthrow of
Mussolini in September 1943 provided the
Albanian guerrillas with arms and other supplies captured from or abandoned by the
Italians. The Germans quickly sent in troops
to clear out the remaining Italian forces,
savagely repressed the local population,
and restored Albanian independence. The
Germans created a government under
Mehdi Frasheri (18721963), but it was
able to control only the main towns and

10

Albanian Uprisings, 19101911

coastal plain. The rest of Albania descended


into chaos as various guerrilla chieftains
fought for power. The Germans attempt to
bolster their control by raising the 21st SS
Mountain Division (Skanderberg) among
mainly the population of Kosovo met with
little success.
The British Balkan Air Force headquarters at Bari controlled the support to
anti-Axis guerrillas in the Balkans and was
decidedly pro-Partisan in both Albania and
Yugoslavia. The British hoped to use all of
the Albanian resistance forces to harass the
German withdrawal from Greece, which
began in September 1944. But when Hoxhas Communists attacked the Balli Kombetar and Abas Kupi instead, the British cut off
aid to the non-Communist resistance groups,
thereby ensuring their defeat. This situation
mirrored that in Yugoslavia, where the Parti etniks in
sans gained an advantage over the C
their ongoing civil war. Kupi and the Balli
Kombetar leaders were evacuated to Italy
with the McLean SOE mission, and the
Communists were left to take over Albania.
German forces withdrew from Albania in
the fall of 1944. With Yugoslav support,
Hoxha seized power on November 29,
1944, and the Peoples Republic of Albania
was recognized by the Allies. Hoxha maintained his ties to his Yugoslav patrons for
only a brief time. When the Yugoslavs split
from Soviet control in 1948, Hoxha used
the opportunity to support the Soviets and
rid Albania of Yugoslav domination. Albania subsequently developed anti-Western
views and supported an isolated Stalinist
regime for nearly half a century.
Charles R. Shrader
See also: Hoxha, Enver, 19081985; Germany
in the Balkans during World War II; GrecoItalian War, 19401941; Italy in the Balkans
during World War II; Partisans, Albania

Further Reading
Fischer, Bernd J. Albania at War, 193945.
West Lafayette, IN: Purdue University
Press, 1999.
Swire, Joseph. Albania: The Rise of the Kingdom. New York: Arno Press, 1971.
Vickers, Miranda. The Albanians: A Modern
History, London: I. B. Tauris, 1997.

Albanian Uprisings, 19101911


Following the Young Turk Revolution of
1908, there was a strong reaction, especially
by many of the highland tribes of northern
Albania, to the imposition of new reforms
by the Young Turk regime. This reaction
eventually broke out into a full-scale rebellion. It was one of the largest rebellions in
the Young Turk period (19081918).
The Ottoman army committed 50,000
60,000 soldiers to quell the rebellion. Fighting principally occurred in the areas around
the Montenegrin border and Kosovo,
although there were isolated incidents elsewhere in Albania. The rebellions of 1910
1911 began for two principal reasons: the
anger of local agents of the deposed sultan
Abdulhamid II against the removal of their
subsidies; and the imposition of new taxes
and regulations in the Albanian provinces
of the Ottoman Empire. Later, as the rebellion dragged on, nationalism also motivated
rebellion.
In April 1910, Shevket Turgut Pasha
(18571924) was dispatched by Istanbul and
moved to crush the rebellion. By the end of
June 1910, the rebellion was defeated. Many
of the erstwhile rebels fled across the
border with Montenegro. This led to the
1911 rebellion, also known as the Highlanders Rebellion. This rebellion began when
the highland tribes near the city of Scutari
(Shkoder), with the urging of Montenegro,

Alexander I, King of Yugoslavia

attacked Ottoman soldiers in May 1911. The


rebels initially captured Ottoman positions
along the border, threatening Scutari itself.
However, Ottoman forces recovered, recaptured the lost positions, and scattered the
remaining rebels. Many of the rebels fled
again across the border into Montenegro.
Several remained there and launched a third
rebellion in 1912.
James Tallon
See also: Abdulhamid II (18421918); Albania in the Balkan Wars; Montenegro in the
Balkan Wars

Further Reading
Blumi, Isa. Reinstating the Ottomans: Alternative Balkan Modernities, 18001912. New
York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2011.
Gawrych, George. The Crescent and the
Eagle: Ottoman Rule, Islam, and the Albanians, 18741913. London: I. B. Tauris,
2006.
Jackh, Ernst. Im turischen Kriegslager durch
Albanien. Heilbronn: Verlag von Eugen
Salzer, 1911.
Skendi, Stavro. The Albanian National
Awakening, 18781912. Princeton, NJ:
Princeton University Press, 1967.
Treadway, John D. The Falcon and the
Eagle: Montenegro and Austria-Hungary,
19081914. West Lafayette, IN: Purdue
University Press, 1983.

Alexander I, King of Yugoslavia


(18881934)
Alexander was born the second son of Peter
Karadjordjevic of Serbia and Princess Zorka
of Montenegro on December 16, 1888, in
Montenegro. Peter became king of Serbia
in 1903 after the murder of Alexander
Obrenovic by conspirators including Colonel
Dragutin Dimitrijevic (Apis). Educated
in Geneva and St. Petersburg (18761917),

Alexander Karadjordjevic returned to Serbia


as crown prince in 1909 after his elder brother
George disqualified himself for the throne by
murdering his manservant. There, Alexander
continued his education.
During the First Balkan War, Alexander
commanded the Serbian First Army, which
won battles at Kumanovo (October 1912)
and Monastir (November 1912) against the
Ottomans, allowing for Serbian control of a
large part of Macedonia. During the Second
Balkan War, Alexander helped to defeat the
Bulgars at the Battle of Bregalnica (June
July 1913), thereby permitting Serbia to
retain Macedonia. In June 1914, Alexander
became regent of Serbia due to his fathers
age and ill health.
As supreme commander of Serbian
forces, Alexander and his army withstood
three Austro-Hungarian attacks after the
outbreak of the First World War. In 1915
combined Austro-Hungarian, German, and
Bulgarian attacks forced Alexander and the
Serbian army to retreat across the Albanian
mountains to the Adriatic coast. There
Entente ships took the survivors to the
Greek island of Corfu. After rest and recovery, they became part of the Entente Salonika Front in Greece. While in Salonika in
1917, a Serbian military tribunal convicted
a group of army officers of plotting to assassinate Alexander. Among those executed
was Colonel Dimitrijevic, the leader of the
Black Hand. Serbian forces were instrumental in the Battle of Dobro Pole in September 1918, which forced Bulgaria out of
the war.
In late 1918, Serbia joined with the South
Slav lands of the former Austria-Hungary
and Montenegro to become the Kingdom of
Serbs, Croats and Slovenes with King Peter
Karadjordjevic as monarch. When Peter
died on August 16, 1921, Regent Alexander
succeeded his father as king. The kingdom

11

12

Alexander Obrenovic, King of Serbia

did not meld together, mainly because of conflict between the Serbs, who were the largest
national group, and the Croats, the secondlargest national group. Due to ethnic strife,
Alexander proclaimed a royal dictatorship in
January 1929, officially changing the name
of the country to Yugoslavia. Under his leadership, Yugoslavia joined the Little Entente and
the Balkan Entente. During a state visit to
France, Alexander was assassinated on October 9, 1934, by a terrorist with connections to
Croatian Ustasa and Macedonian VMRO.
Both of these were separatist organizations.
Gregory C. Ference
See also: Austria-Hungary in the Balkans
during World War I; Black Hand; Dimitrijevic,
Dragutin (18761917); Kosovo, Battle of,
1915; Kumanovo, Battle of, 1912; Serbia in
the Balkan Wars; Serbia in World War I; Serbia, Invasions of, 1914; Serbia, Invasions of,
1915; Serbian Retreat, 1915; Ustasa; VMRO

Further Reading
Graham, Stephen. Alexander of Jugoslavia:
Strongman of the Balkans. London: Cassel,
1938.
Graham, Stephen. Alexander of Yugoslavia:
The Story of the King Who Was Murdered
in Marseilles. New Haven, CT: Yale
University Press, 1939.
Roberts, Allen. The Turning Point: The Assassination of Louis Barthou and King
Alexander I of Yugoslavia. New York:
St. Martins Press, 1970.

Alexander Obrenovic, King


of Serbia (18761903)
Alexander Obrenovic was born on
August 14, 1876, to King Milan Orbrenovic
(18541901) of Serbia and his wife Natalija
Obrenovic (18591941). On March 6, 1889,
King Milan unexpectedly abdicated and proclaimed Alexander, then 13 years old, king

of Serbia, with Alexanders mother as regent


until he turned 18 years old.
In 1893, Alexander, aged 16, staged a
coup, dismissed the regents, and took royal
authority into his own hands. In May 1894,
he staged a second coup in which he abolished his fathers liberal 1888 constitution
and restored the conservative one of
1869. In 1894, Alexander brought his
father, Milan, back to Serbia and, in 1898,
appointed him commander in chief of the
Serbian army.
In the summer of 1900, Alexander suddenly announced his engagement to the widowed Draga Masin (18641903), a former
lady-in-waiting to his mother. The projected
union initially aroused great opposition
from his father, Prime Minister Dr. Vladan
Dordevic (18441930), and his mother.
Milan and Dordevic resigned from their
respective offices, and Alexander banished
his mother from Serbia. Opposition to the
marriage subsided somewhat after Russian
czar Nicholas II published his congratulations to Alexander on his engagement and
of his acceptance to act as the principal witness at the wedding, which took place on
August 5, 1900.
On his own initiative, Alexander unveiled
a liberal constitution, introducing a twochamber legislature for the first time in Serbias constitutional history. The army,
already dissatisfied with the kings marriage,
became more dissatisfied at the rumors that
Alexander might proclaim one of the
queens two unpopular brothers as heirpresumptive to the throne. Then, in a third
coup in March 1903, Alexander suspended
the constitution for 30 minutes so he could
dismiss the old senators and councilors of
state and replace them with new ones,
increasing dissatisfaction in the country.
In June 1903, a group of army officers
with ties to the Serbian secret society the

Alexander of Battenberg, Prince of Bulgaria

Black Hand and several politicians conspired to assassinate the king and his wife
and replace him with Peter I Karageorgevic.
The conspirators invaded the palace and brutally murdered the royal couple in the early
morning of June 11, 1903. King Alexander
and Queen Draga were buried in the crypt
of St. Marks Church, Belgrade.
Robert B. Kane
See also: Black Hand; Dimitrijevic, Dragutin
(18761917); Obrenovic, Milan (18541901)

Further Reading
Cox, John K. The History of Serbia. Westport,
CT: Greenwood Press, 2002.
Mackenzie, David. Apis, the Congenial Conspirator: The Life of Colonel Dragutin T.
Dimitrijevic. Boulder, CO: East European
Monographs, 1989.
Pavlowitch, Stevan K. Serbia: The History of
an Idea. New York: New York University
Press, 2002.

Alexander of Battenberg, Prince


of Bulgaria (18571893)
From 1879 to 1886, Alexander of Battenberg was the first elected prince of Bulgaria
and had the unfortunate job of trying to create a nation-state without the support of the
major European powers. In particular, the
Russian czars worked for his removal from
office throughout his short reign. Nevertheless, Alexander oversaw the union of
Bulgaria with the province of Eastern
Rumelia in 1885 and successfully led his
army against the invading Serbs in the
same year. By the time he abdicated in
1886, he was a symbol of national unity for
the Bulgarian people.
Alexander was born on April 5, 1857, in
Verona, Italy, a member of an aristocratic
family that was related to much of European

royalty. His godfathers were his uncle, Czar


Alexander II, and Count Josef Radetzky
(17661858), the Austrian field marshal.
His father was stationed with a garrison in
Verona when Alexander was born, but in
1861, he retired and moved the family
back to Darmstadt in Hesse (present-day
Germany). When the Russo-Ottoman War
broke out in 1877, Alexander was a lieutenant in the Hessian Dragoons and was eager
to participate in the conflict. Over the next
few years, he served in several military
capacities, most notably with the Bulgarian
cavalry and later as an aide to King Carol I
(18391914) of Romania.
When the war ended, the Congress of
Berlin established Bulgaria as an autonomous principality within the Ottoman
Empire, with the restriction that Bulgarias
new monarch could not come from a ruling
dynasty so as not to tip the balance of
power in the Balkans in favor of one of
the major European powers. The major
European powers also retained a supervisory
role over the newly independent nation, particularly Russia, which was the dominant
power in the region. Alexanders name was
put forward by the Russian minister of foreign affairs, who thought that the young
man could easily be made an instrument of
Russian policy. His candidacy had the backing of both Czar Alexander II and Britains
Queen Victoria.
On April 29, 1879, the Bulgarian National
Assembly was given a slate of three candidates for the position of prince: Alexander,
Prince Henry XXV of Reuss (18561911),
and Prince Waldemar of Denmark (1858
1939). Alexander, the only serious candidate
and the one who had fought recently on the
side of the Bulgarians during the RussoOttoman War, was easily elected.
Alexander arrived in Varna, Bulgaria, on
June 29, 1879, after a visit with the Ottoman

13

14

Ali Pasha

sultan Abdulhamid II in Constantinople.


Immediately after he ascended the throne,
Alexander attempted to institute some
reforms. He felt the Bulgarian constitution
was too liberal, but appeals to other monarchs to get it changed were unsuccessful.
He also had to contend with a strong proRussian faction within Bulgaria and Russias continual interference in Bulgarian
affairs. Alexander had to walk a fine line
with Russians. He resented their interference, but he needed Russias support to
maintain Bulgarias independence from the
aggression of the Austro-Hungarian Empire.
In 1880, finding it increasingly difficult to
govern with the Russophiles in the legislature, Alexander dissolved the National
Assembly (Subranie). The following year,
he suspended the constitution, concentrating
almost all political power in Bulgaria in
himself. He also attempted to purge the
Bulgarian army of Russophile officers. His
relations with Russia deteriorated even further after the ascension of his cousin, Czar
Alexander III, in 1881. To build support for
his regime among the Bulgarians, he reinstituted the constitution and convened the
National Assembly, ruling with the help of
a liberal-conservative coalition.
Alexanders next move was in violation of
the Congress of Berlin and was sure to further harm Bulgarias relations with Russia,
but nationalist sentiment was growing
increasingly strong in the Balkans. In September 1885, he annexed the province of
Eastern Rumelia with the full backing of
Prime Minister Stefan Stambolov (1854
1895). The Russians were furious but did
not want to go to war over the issue. The
Serbians, however, launched an attack
against Bulgaria in protest of the annexation. Alexander led the Bulgarian army
against the Serbs and had pushed them
back into their own country by November

of that year. Austria then intervened and


convinced Bulgaria to accept peace terms
in the Treaty of Bucharest that confirmed
the status quo in the region.
The pro-Russian factions within Bulgaria
had had enough of Alexander, however. On
August 21, 1886, just months after he finalized the Treaty of Bucharest, Alexander was
forced to abdicate by a coup of pro-Russian
army officers, who then escorted him out of
Bulgaria to Bessarabia. Many referred to the
episode as a kidnapping. He returned shortly
thereafter in an attempt to reclaim his throne,
but his efforts met with little success, despite
the efforts of Stambolov to maintain a proAlexander faction in the country. He formally
abdicated on September 7, 1886.
Alexander arrived back in Hesse on September 10. In 1889, he assumed the title
count of Hartenau and married the actress
Johanna Loisinger (18651951). He received
a commission as a colonel of an infantry regiment stationed in Graz and died there of peritonitis on November 17, 1893.
Michael D. Johnson
See also: Abdulhamid II (18421918); Bucharest, Treaty of 1886; Bulgarian-Serb War,
1885

Further Reading
Corti, Egon Caesar Conte. Alexander von Battenberg. London: Cassell and Company, 1954.
Crampton, R. J. Bulgaria 18781918: A History. Boulder, CO: East European Monographs, 1983.
Stavrianos, L. S. The Balkans since 1453. New
York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1958.

Ali Pasha (1750?1822)


Ali Pasha was born around 1750 in southern
Albania near the village of Tepelene.
A prominent clan, his family lost much of

Antonescu, Ion

its influence after Alis father was murdered.


His mother formed a brigand band where
Ali learned the art of tribal politics, soon
becoming its leader and recovering much
of what the family had lost. The Turks
appointed him to protect northern Epirus in
1778, and he helped put down a rebellion
in Scutari (Shkoder). He became the lieutenant to the pasha of Rumelia, and received the
pashalik of Trikala for his help in the
Austro-Turkish War of 17871791. In
1788, he became pasha of Yannina, his
power center until his death.
Dreaming of establishing a sea power to
rival that of the dey of Algiers, in the late
1790s, Ali Pasha entered into an alliance
with France in order to gain a seaport on
the Adriatic. In 1807, he switched sides to
the British before briefly renewing his alliance with the French, all of this with the
approval of the sultan.
The weakness of the Ottoman government
allowed Ali Pasha and his sons to expand
their territory to include most of Albania,
large sections of western Greece, and part of
the Peloponnese peninsula. In 1820, the
sultan, who wished to enact reforms to
strengthen the empire, sent an army in an
attempt to remove Ali from power. Ali worked
with the Christian Greeks, who were fighting
for their independence, against the Ottomans,
but after a two-year siege of Yannina, Ali
was killed in either January or February 1822,
with his head being sent to the sultan.
Gregory C. Ference
See also: Greek War of Independence, 1821
1832

Further Reading
Baggally, John W. Ali Pasha and Great
Britain. Oxford: Blackwell, 1938.
Fleming, K. E. The Muslim Bonaparte: Diplomacy and Orientalism in Ali Pasha Greece.

Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press,


1999.

Antonescu, Ion (18821946)


Romanian marshal and dictator Ion Antonescu was born in Pitesti on June 14, 1882
to an aristocratic military family. Antonescu
graduated from Romanian military schools
in Craiova (1902) and Iasi (1904). A cavalry
lieutenant during the 1907 Peasant Revolt,
he fought in the Second Balkan War and
was an operations officer during World War
I. From 1922 to 1927, he was military
attache in Paris, Brussels, and London. He
was chief of the Army General Staff in
1933 and 1934.
As with most others among the nationalistic Romanian military elite, Antonescu
favored British and French political influence. However, he closely monitored both
the Third Reichs ascendancy and the looming Soviet Union in his vigilance regarding
Romanian territorial integrity, pragmatically
preparing for a German accommodation
should such a choice become necessary.
As minister of defense, Antonescu became
embroiled in and frustrated by the corrupt
governing vicissitudes of King Carol II
(18931953), especially after 1937. Protesting Carols February 1938 establishment
of the Royal Dictatorship and his suppression of the fascistic Legion of Saint Michael
(the Iron Guard), Antonescu defended the
Iron Guards leaders in court and was briefly
jailed and outposted to Chisinau (Kishinev)
near the Soviet border.
Following the Soviet Unions occupation
of Bessarabia and the ceding of Transylvania to Hungary in summer 1940, in September, King Carol was coerced into naming
Antonescu head of the troubled government
before abdicating under pressure in favor of

15

16

Austria-Hungary in the Balkans during World War I

his son Michael, age 19. Antonescus title,


Conducator, was the Romanian equivalent
of Duce or Fuhrer, and he used his broad
powers to oust the Iron Guard from
government in January 1941. That June, he
assigned 14 Romanian divisions to Germanys invasion of the Soviet Union, Operation Barbarossa. For reclaiming Romanian
lands from the Soviets, Antonescu was proclaimed marshal by figurehead King
Michael I on August 23, 1941. Antonescu
continued to supply the German war effort
with troops (ultimately, Romania lost substantially more men than Italy) in exchange
for German military favor, but on the home
front he sought to temper his allys overbearing appetite for Romanias oil and agricultural bounty. Antonescu did not hesitate
to assert Romanian interests in direct conversations with Hitler.
In coming to terms with Romanias Jewish question, Antonesculike Benito Mussolini in Italypreferred his own solution to
anything dictated by Berlin, employing policies that (officially) allowed Jews to emigrate in exchange for payment or to face
deportation to Romanian-administered
work camps in the Ukrainian region of
Transnistria. Nonetheless, Antonescus
regime was responsible for the deaths of
more than 250,000 Romanian and Ukrainian
Jews and Gypsies as a result of its romanization policies during 19401944, despite
its refusal to join Germanys final solution
outright. After the catastrophe of Stalingrad
made victory problematic, Antonescu
began to moderate his policies toward the
Romanian Jews.
Antonescu was deposed by coup-installed
King Michael on August 23, 1944, and
turned over to the occupying Soviet forces.
His war crimes show trial, held in Bucharest
on May 417, 1946, led to the death

sentence, and he was executed there on


June 1, 1946.
Gordon E. Hogg
See also: Iron Guard; Michael I, King of
Romania (1921); Romania in World War II;
Stalingrad, Battle of, 19421943

Further Reading
Hitchins, Keith. Rumania: 18661947. Oxford
and New York: Oxford University Press,
1994.
Temple, Mark. The Politicization of History:
Marshal Antonescu and Romania. East
European Politics and Societies 10, no. 3
(1996): 457503.

Austria-Hungary in the Balkans


during World War I
During World War I, there were three basic
weaknesses of the Austro-Hungarian military. First, about one-quarter of all conscripted soldiers were illiterate, and most of
the conscripts from the subject nationalities
simply did not understand German or
Hungarian. Communication within the
Habsburg army was at best somewhat difficult. Second, for most of these same subject
nationalitiesCzechs, Slovaks, Poles,
Romanians, and southern Slavsthere were
links and sympathies that crossed international borders, a sense of identity with the
empires various enemies. Third, AustriaHungary, like Russia, lacked the industrial
base needed to wage protracted war and was
not well served in terms of railways and rolling stock so important in the timely movement of formations between fronts.
The latter point was but one factor of
a division of the empire into two parts
that basically fell apart during the war.
The Austrian part was relatively industrialized, whereas Hungary was the empires

Austria-Hungary in the Balkans during World War I

Austro-Hungarian Army troops on their way to the Romanian Front in the Carpathian
Mountains in March 1917. (National Archives)

breadbasket. But with the collapse of


domestic industrial production and the rail
transport system, Austria lacked the consumer goods to sell to Hungary, and Hungary would not sell grain to Austria. The
latter development gave rise to the bitter
Austrian comment that Hungary would
rather give grain to the pigs than to Austria.
Austria-Hungary did not have an army; it
had two armies, one for each of the two
parts of the empire. In 1914, it was nominally able to put 32 infantry and 9 cavalry
divisions into the field and had a reserve of
16 infantry and 2 cavalry divisions; but the
fact was that the empire called up only
29 percent of its eligible manpower for service and the reserve divisions were decidedly
third-rate and aging. The problem for the
army was that the disastrous defeats of 1914
in Galicia really wrecked the Austrian part
of the army, and the Brusilov Offensive completed the process. The Austrian armyor
the Austrian part of the armyreally ceased

to exist after that time. The adoption of field


gray uniforms and the spiked helmet reflected
an increased German influence throughout the
Austrian formations. The Germans, in addition to providing chiefs of staff to the various
commands within the Austro-Hungarian
army, increasingly provided German formations to support Austro-Hungarian formations
in the field. By 1917, the majority of Austrian
troops regarded themselves as German rather
than Habsburg, and this was manifest in the
honoring of the German national anthem
rather than the imperial one. For their part,
the Germans were increasingly contemptuous
of Austria-Hungary, its head of state, army,
and military personnel. Alliedor handcuffedto a corpse was the not inaccurate
summary of this relationship.
Austro-Hungarian forces first invaded
Serbia in August 1914. They were stopped at
the battle of Cer Mountain. Two subsequent
invasions that same year met with failure. In
October 1915, the Austro-Hungarian Third

17

18

Averescu, Alexandru

Army, this time accompanied by one German


and two Bulgarian armies, again invaded
Serbia. The Central Powers overran the
exhausted Serbs. Austro-Hungarian forces
occupied most of Serbia. At the beginning of
1916, they occupied Montenegro and established a front against the Italians in Albania
roughly along a line north of Vlore to Lake
Ohrid.
In 1916, Austro-Hungarian reserve troops
resisted Romanian attempts to break into
Transylvania. The Austro-Hungarian First
Army together with some German formations counterattacked across the Transylvanian Alps and swept into Wallachia. At the
same time, a Bulgarian-German force
attacked Romania in Dobrudja. Through
1918, Austro-Hungarian forces maintained
occupation duties in Montenegro, Romania,
and Serbia. The occupation regime in Serbia
was especially rigorous.
Evidence of the progressive collapse of
Austria-Hungary is provided in three matters. First, throughout 1917, there were a
growing number of industrial incidents that
escalated after the halving of the flour ration
in January 1918. Strikes spread and workers councils sprang up, and military censors
noted throughout society and the armed
forces an increased political edge to incidents, especially in the military disturbances
of May 1918. Second, by wars end, the
physical state of the army and its soldiers
bordered on desperate. The average weight
of ordinary rank-and-file soldiers with the
Tenth Army was as little as 120 pounds, perhaps 30 to 40 pounds underweight. Most of
the troops were without leather boots, full
uniforms, adequate underwear, and protective clothing for mountain warfare and
were reduced to eating their transport animals. Third, after May 1918, there were
increasing problems of desertion from the
army. An estimated 400,000 men deserted

between June and September 1918, and in


the final defeat at Vittorio Veneto in Italy,
500,000 men surrendered or deserted. By
this time the war was clearly over, and
most troops were trying to go home. There
is a certain poignancy in accounts of formations leaving the front en masse and trying
to get home with railways working only
intermittently. There is little evidence that
units containing Balkan peoples, mainly
Romanians and Serbs, were any more or
less reliable than other Habsburg troops.
Bosnian units were especially feared by
their enemies on the Italian and Russian
Fronts. But this was the final act in a story
of an army that reached back over six centuries and that by wars end in November 1918,
like the state itself, had ceased to exist.
Hedley P. Willmott
See also: Cer Mountain, Battle of, 1914;
Romania, Invasion of, 1916; Serbia, Invasions
of, 1914; Serbia, Invasions of, 1915

Further Reading
Gumz, Jonathan E. The Resurrection and Collapse of Empire in Habsburg Serbia,
19141918. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009.
Rothenberg, Gunther E. The Army of Francis
Joseph. West Lafayette, IN: Purdue University Press, 1976.
Scheer, Tamara. Zwischen Front und Heimat,
sterreich-Ungarns Milita verwaltungen
O
im Ersten Weltkrieg. Frankfurt am Main:
Peter Lang, 2009.

Averescu, Alexandru
(18591938)
Romanian army general Alexandru
Averescu was born on March 9, 1859, in
Ismail, Bessarabia. Averescu enlisted in the
Romanian army in 1876 and fought in the
war against Turkey during 18771878.

Averescu, Alexandru

After the war, Averescu remained in the


army and was commissioned a lieutenant in
1891. Promoted to captain in 1896, he studied at the Military Staff College in Turin,
Italy. During 18951898, Averescu was
military attache in Berlin. He was promoted
to colonel in 1901 and to brigadier general
in 1906. In 1907, Averescu accepted an
appointment as minister of war. He oversaw
the suppression of the great peasant uprising
that year. Advanced to major general in
1912, he was Romanian army chief of staff
in the Second Balkan War of 1913.
With the beginning of World War I, Averescu became a strong advocate of Romanian
intervention on the Allied side, which
occurred in August 1916. He then took
field command of the Third Army and forces
in Dobrudja to defend the southern border
with Bulgaria. Averescu planned a daring
strategy of striking across the Danube River
and taking German General August von
Mackensens forces in the rear.
Averescus (18491945) crossing of the
Danube failed due to poor weather, the Central Powers river flotillas, and the fortuitous
presence of Bulgarian army units at the point
of attack. Averescu then assumed command
of the Second Army, restoring his military
reputation in a series of defensive actions
back toward the Sireth River. The Second
Army became the only Romanian army still
in the field. In July 1917, Averescu became a
national military hero when his Second
Army, supported by the Russian Fourth
Army, broke through the Central Powers
defenses on a 20-mile-wide front at Marasti
and advanced up to 12 miles. This offensive
forced the Central Powers to transfer five
infantry and two cavalry divisions to this
area and to modify their own offensive
plans. Later Averescu was responsible for

defensive actions in the Carpathians and the


defense of Marasti. Although he held the Sireth line, Russian forces collapsed and Romania was forced to sue for peace.
In February 1918, following the defeat of
Romania, Prime Minister Ionel Bra tianu
(18641927) resigned and King Ferdinand
I appointed Averescu prime minister, with
the task of negotiating a settlement with the
Central Powers. Averescu knew von Mackensen and was strongly opposed to Bolshevism; Ferdinand hoped these factors might
allow a more generous settlement, but the
resulting Treaty of Bucharest was nonetheless extraordinarily harsh. Czar Ferdinand
was sufficiently displeased with the treaty
that he refused to sign it and forced Averescu from office.
After the war, Averescu established the
Peoples League Party, which won the 1920
elections. He served twice as prime minister,
from 1920 to 1921 and from 1926 to 1928.
Promoted to field marshal in 1930, Averescu
was appointed a member of the Crown
Council by King Carol II in 1937. He died
in Bucharest on October 2, 1938.
Brandon H. Turner and Spencer C. Tucker
See also: Bucharest, Treaty of, 1918; Romania, Peasant Uprising, 1907; Romania in
World War I

Further Reading
Alexandrescu, Vasile. Romania in World War
I: A Synopsis of Military History. Bucharest: Military Publishing House, 1985.
Seton-Watson, R. W. A History of the Roumanians: From Roman Times to the Completion of Unity. Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 1934.
Torrey, Glenn. Romania and World War I: A
Collection of Studies. Portland, OR: Center
for Romanian Studies, 1998.

19

B
Balkan Entente, 1934

were not interested in confronting Nazi


Germany in Eastern Europe. Also by then,
all members of the Balkan Entente were
aligned economically with Nazi Germany.
The Balkan Entente was basically a defensive arrangement. None of the signatories of
the Balkan Entente ever implemented any of
its provisions. In 1954, three of the members
of the former Balkan Entente, Greece, Turkey,
and Yugoslavia, revived the idea of a Balkan
mutual assistance agreement. Like the Balkan
Entente, the Balkan Pact of 1954 proved to be
ephemeral.
Richard C. Hall

The Balkan Entente of 1934, or Four Power


Pact, was an effort by Greece, Romania,
Turkey, and Yugoslavia to promote better
relations among the Balkan states. It grew
out of a series of four conferences held in
Athens in 1930, Istanbul in 1931, Bucharest
in 1932, and Salonika in 1933. The Balkan
Entente itself was signed by the four states
in Athens on February 9, 1934, after
preliminary talks in Belgrade. The pact
guaranteed mutual security and pledged to
maintain the territorial status quo. The pact
mainly was directed against Bulgaria, which
harbored revisionist claims against all of the
signatories. Some effort was made to obtain
the Sofia governments adherence to the
pact. The Bulgarians, however, were not prepared to abandon their nationalist aspirations,
especially those in regard to Greek and Yugoslav Macedonia. To a lesser degree, the pact
was also intended to provide the Greeks and
Yugoslavs with security against Albanian
territorial claims. Albania itself provided little
threat, but by the early 1930s, Italian influence had come to dominate the country.
Benito Mussolinis (18831945) aggressive
intentions throughout the Mediterranean
region were well known. The signatories of
the pact intended the Balkan Entente to be a
southeastern European counterpart to the Little Entente. Romania and Yugoslavia were
members of both.
Nevertheless, by 1938, the Balkan
Entente was virtually defunct. The Munich
Crisis indicated that Britain and France

See also: Balkan Pact, 1954; Little Entente

Further Reading
Hall, Richard C. The Modern Balkans: A History. London: Reaktion, 2011.
Jelavich, Barbara. The History of the Balkans.
Vol. 2, Twentieth Century. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 1983.
Kerner, Robert Joseph, and Harry Nicholas
Howard. The Balkan Conferences and the
Balkan Entente, 19301935.Westport, CT:
Greenwood Press, 1970.

Balkan League
In 1912, the young, independent nations of
Bulgaria, Greece, Montenegro, and Serbia
formed a military alliance, named the
Balkan League, for the purpose of attacking
their former subjugator, Turkey. The military conflicts that ensued heightened nationalist tensions in the Balkans as well as

20

Balkan Pact, 1954

among Western European powers with interests in the region. Only two years later, the
aspirations of the Balkan League countries
and the heated international conflicts they
engendered helped ignite the diplomatic
crisis that started World War I.
At the turn of the century, the newly independent Balkan countries, after hundreds of
years of domination by the Turkish Ottoman
Empire, were hotbeds of nationalist sentiments. At the same time, the regional
powers of Turkey and Austria were intent
on exerting their influence on the smaller
Balkan states, and moreover, the larger
European powersFrance, Britain, Germany, and Russiaall believed that they
had vital national interests of their own in
the Balkans.
The political instability in the region first
led to military conflict in 1912. The First
Balkan War was indirectly brought on by
Italys successful bid to assert its imperialist
designs on Turkish territory along the
Libyan coast. The Italian victory exposed
Turkeys military weakness, a weakness
that the Balkan countries were happy to
exploit. To this end, Bulgaria, Greece,
Montenegro, and Serbia formed the Balkan
League in October 1912.
The league was quite successful in its
initial military efforts. All four countries
invaded simultaneously, and though both
sides had about equal forces, the leagues
tactics proved superior. The four armies
quickly pushed the Ottoman forces back
and forced Turkey to surrender all of its
European possessions, with the exception
of Constantinople (Istanbul). The Balkan
Leagues victory, however, was short-lived.
Its members, joined by Romania, soon
went to war with one another over the conquered territory, and the league disintegrated. A second round of battles followed

in 1913; in this Second Balkan War, Turkey


won back a portion of its territory.
Overall, the Balkan Wars did little to
satisfy nationalist aspirations in the region.
At the end of the Second Balkan War,
Great Britain intervened in hopes of ending
conflict between the Balkan nations. The
London Conference, as it was called, was
not particularly successful. Rather than abating tensions, the conference aggravated the
situation by granting Austria the land
between Serbia and the Adriatic Sea, effectively cutting Serbia off from the sea and
dashing any hopes of Serbian expansion. In
June 1914, it was an angry Serbian nationalist
who took revenge on Austria by assassinating
the Austrian archduke Franz Ferdinand, an
event that helped spark the outbreak of
World War I.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Balkan War, First, 19121913; Balkan Wars, 19121913, Causes; Bulgaria in
the Balkan Wars; Greece in the Balkan Wars;
Montenegro in the Balkan Wars; Serbia in the
Balkan Wars

Further Reading
Geshov, Ivan. The Balkan League. Translated
by Constantin C. Mincoff. London: J.
Murray, 1915
Hall, Richard C. The Balkan Wars, 1912
1913: Prelude to the First World War.
London: Routledge, 2000.
Helmreich, E. C. The Diplomacy of the Balkan
Wars, 19121913. Cambridge, MA:
Harvard University Press, 1938.

Balkan Pact, 1954


The Balkan Pact of 1954 was a security
arrangement among Greece, Turkey, and
Yugoslavia. NATO members Greece and
Turkey were geographically separated from

21

22

Balkan War, First, 19121913

the other NATO allies by the strong Soviet


presence in Eastern Europe. Since its 1948
break with the Soviet Union, Yugoslavia was
isolated and vulnerable between both Cold
War factions. It had NATO allies Greece and
Italy on its southern and northern borders.
Soviet allies Hungary, Romania, and Bulgaria
threatened on the eastern borders.
The Yugoslav dictator Josip Broz Tito
attempted to end this isolation by reaching
an accommodation with Greece and Turkey.
On February 28, 1953, Yugoslavia signed a
Treaty of Friendship with Greece and
Turkey in Ankara. A more detailed agreement ensued the next year. On August 9,
1954, in Bled, Yugoslavia, representatives
from Greece, Turkey, and Yugoslavia signed
a Treaty of Alliance, Political Cooperation,
and Mutual Assistance. This agreement provided for mutual military assistance in the
event of an attack against any of the signees.
It was to remain in force for 20 years and
could be renewed. The agreement also provided for the establishment of a Balkan Consultative Assembly to establish the basis for
increased economic cooperation. This provision had the potential to facilitate economic
development in a region sorely in need of
it. The Balkan Pact of 1954 replicated to a
degree the Balkan Entente of 1934, although
Romania did not affiliate this time.
Unfortunately, the Balkan Pact did not
endure. Disagreement over the future of
Cyprus undermined the pact. Also, by
1955, the foreign policy of Soviet Russia
and its allies in regard to Yugoslavia had
moderated. The new Soviet dictator,
Nikita S. Khrushchev (18941971), visited
Belgrade in May 1955. Tito began to pursue
a policy of nonalignment. Although the signatories never formally repudiated the Balkan
Pact, in 1960, both Greece and Yugoslavia
indicated that they considered it defunct.
Richard C. Hall

See also: Tito, Josip Broz (18921980);


Yugoslav-Soviet Split

Further Reading
Hall, Richard C. The Modern Balkans:
A History. London: Reaktion, 2011.
Junkovic, Banimir M. The Balkans in
International Relations. London: Palgrave,
1988.

Balkan War, First, 19121913


Fighting in the First Balkan War began on
October 8, 1912, between Montenegro and
the Ottoman Empire. On October 18, Bulgaria, Greece, and Serbia entered the war, all
siding with Montenegro. In many ways the
armies of the Balkan League were similar.
They all followed European models for
staff work, training, logistics, communication, and sanitation. Many officers had
received education at Great Powers military
schools. They all depended upon conscripted peasants to fill their ranks. They all
had a variety of equipment from European
sources.
The Bulgarians had the largest army
among the Balkan allies, with around
350,000 men after mobilization. Volunteers
from the Macedonian revolutionary organizations supplemented the Bulgarian ranks.
The Greeks were able to field around
110,000 men. Alone among the Balkan
allies, the Greeks possessed a substantial
navy, which, in addition to eight destroyers,
19 torpedo boats, and one submarine,
included the formidable armored cruiser
Georgios Averof. The Montenegrin army
essentially was a partially trained militia
consisting of most of the males of military
age in the country. This amounted to around
36,000 men. Montenegrin immigrants in the
United States returned home to add to the

Balkan War, First, 19121913

Rearguard of the Ottoman army on the road Giannitsa (Greece) during the First Balkan
War, November 1912. (adoc-photos/Corbis)

Montenegrin force. The Serbian army had a


mobilized strength of 230,000 men.
The Ottomans had the largest single army,
with the potential of 450,000 men. This
army, however, lacked the homogeneity of
the Balkan forces. Armenian, Greek, and
Slavic soldiers in the Ottoman army could
not be expected to fight loyally for the Ottoman sultan. Although the Young Turk
regime had implemented some reforms
after 1908, these were not yet fully realized.
Also, the Ottoman forces were distributed
throughout the empire. Some were fighting
an insurgency in Yemen, some were still in
Ottoman North Africa, and others were in
Anatolia, Mesopotamia, and Syria. At the
beginning of the war, they had approximately 300,000 in their European provinces.
The Ottomans also had a navy that included
a modern light cruiser, the Hamidiye; a

modern armored cruiser, the Mecidiye; and


a number of other vessels.
The Ottoman armies were deployed as
First (also Eastern or Thracian) Army
under the command of Abdullah Pasha
(18461937) and the Second (Macedonian
or Western) Army led by Ali Risa Pasha
(18601932). The most important theater
was in Thrace. The Bulgarians committed
the majority of their forces to confront the
main Ottoman army, which was positioned
to defend the Ottoman capital. Unwisely,
the Ottoman commander initiated an offensive, which the Bulgarians easily deflected.
They responded with a strong offensive
through northeastern Thrace. The Bulgarian
armies were under the nominal command
of Czar Ferdinand (18611948) but were
led by deputy commander in chief General
Mihail Savov (18571928). The Bulgarian

23

24

Balkan War, First, 19121913

First Army led by General Vasil Kutinchev


(18591941) and General Radko Dimitrievs (18591918) Third Army overcame
Ottoman resistance at Kirk Killase (Lozengrad) and at a massive battle raging from
Buni Hisar (Pinarhisar) to Lyule Burgas
(Lule Burgaz). This later event was the largest European battle between the FrancoPrussian War and World War I.
At the same time, General Nikola Ivanovs Second Army first masked and then
surrounded and besieged the Ottomans at
Adrianople (Edirne). They did not immediately attempt to take the well-fortified
former Ottoman capital. The Bulgarian
offensive thrust the Ottomans to their final
defensive positions at Chataldzha (Catalca),
about 20 miles outside of Constantinople.
The presence of the Bulgarian First and
Third Armies outside of Constantinople
caused some disconcert among the Great
Powers, especially the Russians. Ottoman
forces finally rallied on November 1617
and pushed back a Bulgarian attempt to
cross the Chataldzha lines and take Constantinople. Smaller Bulgarian units, meanwhile, proceeded against little opposition
into the Rhodopes and western Thrace and
on toward Salonika.
In the western theater, the Greek army
advanced in two directions against slight
opposition. The main thrust of the Greek
army was directed at Salonika. The Army
of Thessaly under the command of Crown
Prince Constantine (18681923) soon overran its namesake region, defeating a small
Ottoman force at Yanitsa on November 1.
After negotiations with the Ottoman commander of Salonika, Hassan Tahsin Pasha
(18451918), the Greeks entered Salonika
on November 8, only a day ahead of the
Bulgarian unit moving south from Bulgaria
across the Rhodopes with the same
objective. An uneasy condominium ensued.

The Army of Epirus led by General


Constantine Sapountzakes (18461931)
moved into Epirus and besieged the important town of Janina (Ioannina). A unit of
Italian volunteers led by Ricciotti Garibaldi
(18471924), the son of Giuseppe, participated in this campaign. The Greeks did not
immediately surround the town, so it was
able to withstand their initial assaults. An
uneasy condominium ensued in that city.
The Greek navy seized the Aegean Island
of Tenedos on October 20. This effectively
closed the straits. The Greeks then held the
Ottoman fleet at bay and occupied most of
the rest of the Aegean Islands, including
Chios and Mytilene.
The Montenegrins had two objectives,
the sanjak of Novi Pazar and the northern
Albanian town of Scutari (Shkoder). In pursuit of these objectives, they divided their
forces into three groups. The nominal commander of all the Montenegrin forces was
King Nikola (18411921). The Eastern
Division commanded by Brigadier Janko
Vukotich (18661927) advanced into the
sanjak of Novi Pazar, while most of the rest
of the Montenegrin forces advanced toward
Scutari (Shkoder). The Zeta Division led by
Crown Prince Danilo (18711939) moved
along the eastern shore of Lake Scutari
toward its objective, while Brigadier Mitar
Martinovichs (18701954) Coastal Division proceeded along the western shore of
the lake. Despite several direct assaults,
Scutari held firm. The Montenegrins fought
bravely but without many of the apparatus
of a modern army. This undoubtedly hampered their ability to take Scutari.
The Serbian chief of staff, Vojvoda Radomir Putnik (18471917), planned an all-out
attack on the Ottomans. He arrayed their
forces in four main groups. The largest
group, the Serbian First Army, commanded
by Crown Prince Alexander (18881934),

Balkan War, First, 19121913

advanced from the north into Macedonia.


Meanwhile, the Serbian Second Army
under General Stepa Stepanovic (1856
1929)the main part of the Serbian
armymoved south from Bulgarian
territory into Macedonia in order to cut off
any Ottoman units retreating south. It easily
defeated the Ottomans at Kumanovo in
northern Macedonia and then, after engagements at Prilep and Bitola (Monastir),
proceeded to occupy most of the rest of
Macedonia. The Serbian Third Army commanded by General Bozhidar Jankovich
overran Kosovo, the emotional center of
Serbian nationalism. It proceeded on to
Skoplje and from there crossed over the
Albanian Alps into Albania. On November 28, elements of the Serbian Third Army
reached Durres (Durazzo) on the Adriatic
coast. This was the cause of great disconcert
for the Austro-Hungarians and Italians. Two
smaller Serbian units entered the sanjak of
Novi Pazar. Having achieved their initial
aims quickly and without heavy losses, the
Serbs agreed both to a Bulgarian request to
send troops to participate in the siege of
Adrianople and to a Montenegrin plea for
help at Scutari. The Serbian Second Army
went to Thrace to help the Bulgarians at the
end of October 1912. Elements of the
Serbian Third Army had assisted the Montenegrins at Scutari since December 1912. In
February 1913, the Serbs sent an additional
30,000-man force and some artillery to
help the Montenegrins.
By the time the warring parties agreed to
an armistice on December 3, the only territories in Europe remaining under Ottoman
control were the besieged cities of Adrianople, Janina, and Scutari; the Gallipoli
Peninsula; and that part of eastern Thrace
behind the Chataldzha lines.
While the Balkan allies and the Ottomans
assembled in London on December 16 to

negotiate a peace settlement, the ambassadors of the Great Powers credentialed to


Great Britain convened nearby to direct the
course of the peace settlement and to protect
their own interests. The London ambassadors conference, on the insistence of
Austria-Hungary and Italy, recognized the
independence of an Albanian state that
some Albanian notables had proclaimed in
Vlore (Valona) on November 28, 1912.
This state blocked Serbian and Montenegrin
claims to territories on the eastern shore of
the Adriatic Sea. These claims had the
strong support of Russia. At the same time,
the Austrians demanded that Serbian troops
evacuate those portions of northern Albania
occupied that autumn. The Great Powers
were able to forestall the outbreak of war
between Austria-Hungary and Russia over
this issue. Talks between the Balkan allies
and the Ottomans soon stalled, mainly over
the issue of Adrianople, and hostilities
resumed on February 3, 1913.
Fighting during this second round mainly
occurred at the three besieged cities of Adrianople, Janina, and Scutari. On March 6,
Janina fell to the Greeks. On the 26th, the
Bulgarians, with some Serbian help, took
Adrianople. The Montenegrins and assisting
Serbian units bogged down around Scutari.
A major assault in February failed. Only on
April 23, after the departure of the Serbs
under pressure from the Great Powers, did
the Montenegrins succeed in entering the
city after three days of negotiations with
the exhausted defenders. Nevertheless, the
major powers, especially Austria-Hungary,
refused to sanction a Montenegrin occupation of Scutari because the London Ambassadors Conference had assigned it to the
new Albanian state. After threats and a
show of force, together with the promise of
generous subsidies, the Montenegrins
evacuated Scutari. Elsewhere, elements of

25

26

Balkan War, Second, 1913

the Serbian First Army fought with the remnants of the Ottoman Second Army in central Albania. Also, the Bulgarians deflected
Ottoman attacks at Bulair on the Gallipoli
Peninsula and an Ottoman landing at the
port of Sharkoi on the Sea of Marmara. The
Ottomans intended these efforts to take the
pressure off of the defenders of Adrianople
and possibly even to break through to them.
Also fighting resumed at the Chataldzha positions. After the fall of the three besieged
cities, both sides were exhausted. On Ottoman
initiative, the Bulgarians agreed to an armistice on April 15. The other Balkan allies did
not participate in this second armistice. On
May 30, 1913, the Balkan allies and the
Ottomans signed a peace treaty in London.
With the Treaty of London, the Ottoman
Empire ceded its European territories west of
a straight line drawn between Enos and
Media (Enez-Midye). This result clearly was
preliminary. By the time of the signing of
the Treaty of London, friction among the
Balkan allies over the division of Macedonia
had risen to a great degree. The Second Balkan War ensued soon thereafter.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Adrianople, Siege of, 19121913;
Balkan Wars, 19121913, Causes; Balkan
Wars, 19121913, Naval Campaigns; Bulgaria
in the Balkan Wars; Chataldzha, Battle of,
1912; Greece in the Balkan Wars; Janina,
Siege of, 19121913; London, Treaty of, 1913;
Lyule BurgasBuni Hisar, Battle of, 1912;
Montenegro in the Balkan Wars; Scutari, Siege
of, 19121913; Serbia in the Balkan Wars

Further Reading
Erickson, Edward J. Defeat in Detail: The
Ottoman Army in the Balkans, 19121913.
Westport, CT: Praeger, 2003.
Hall, Richard C. The Balkan Wars, 1912
1913: Prelude to the First World War.
London: Routledge, 2000.

Hellenic Army General Staff. A Concise


History of the Balkan Wars, 19121913.
Athens: Army History Directorate, 1998.
Helmreich, E. C. The Diplomacy of the
Balkan Wars, 19121913. Cambridge,
MA: Harvard University Press, 1938.
International Commission to Inquire into the
Causes and Conduct of the Balkan Wars.
The Other Balkan Wars. Washington, DC:
Carnegie Endowment, 1993.
Kiraly, Bela K., and Dimitrije Djordevic, eds.
East Central European Society and the
Balkan Wars. Boulder, CO: Social Science
Monographs, 1987.

Balkan War, Second, 1913


The Second Balkan War, or Intra-Allied
War, in the summer of 1913 was a brief but
bloody conflict in southeastern Europe
between Bulgaria and its erstwhile Balkan
League allies Greece, Montenegro, and Serbia. The main issue among the allies was the
disposition of Macedonia. During the war,
the Ottoman Empire and Romania took advantage of Bulgarias dire situation to join
in the fight against Bulgaria in order to realize specific territorial claims against Bulgaria and to prevent an enlarged Bulgaria
from dominating the Balkan Peninsula.
By the time of the signing of the Treaty of
London on May 30, 1913, ending the Balkan
War, deep divisions had emerged within the
Balkan League. The main problem was the
disposition of Macedonia. The Serbs sought
compensation for Albania in Macedonian
areas assigned to Bulgaria by the alliance
treaty but occupied by Serbia during the
previous autumn fighting. The Bulgarians
refused to consider a Serb demand to revise
the March 1912 treaty, preferring to rely on
Russian arbitration. At the same time,
the Bulgarians and Greeks were skirmishing near Seres and Nigrita over eastern

Balkan War, Second, 1913

Macedonian territories. On May 5, 1913, the


Greeks and Serbs signed an agreement
directed against the Bulgarians. A feeble Russian attempt at arbitration in June never had a
chance for implementation.
On the night of June 2930, Bulgarian
deputy commander in chief General Mihail
Savov (18571928), frustrated by Russian
inactivity and by worried about growing discontent in the armys ranks, launched probing attacks on the orders of Czar Ferdinand
(18611948) against Greek and Serbian
positions in Macedonia. After serving in
the ranks since October 1912, many Bulgarian soldiers were eager for demobilization.
The Bulgarian army command wanted to
use the army or let it go home. This order
was given without the direct knowledge of
the Bulgarian government, which was struggling to persuade St. Petersburg to uphold its
arbitration obligations from the March 1912
Bulgarian-Serbian Treaty. The Bulgarian
prime minister, Stoyan Danev (18581949),
countermanded the attack order, and General Savov complied. This caused Czar Ferdinand to fire General Savov and replace
him with First Balkan War hero Radko
Dimitriev. This retraction of orders and
change of command had the effect of causing great initial confusion in the Bulgarian
army. While some units fought, others
stood aside. The Greeks and Serbs utilized the Bulgarian attacks to implement
their alliance, and the Second Balkan War
ensued.
In southern Macedonia near Shtip, from
July 1 to July 4, the Serbian First and Third
Armies inflicted heavy casualties on the
Bulgarian Fourth Army and forced it back
to the Bergalnitsa River. At the same time,
King Constantines (18681923) Greek
army defeated General Nikola Ivanovs
(18611940) Bulgarian Second Army at
Kilkis on July 4 and squeezed it out of

much of southeastern Macedonia. Greek


forces quickly overran and captured Bulgarian troops stationed in Salonika to enforce
Bulgarian claims to that city. Bulgarian
forces retreated from the Greeks and Serbs
toward their prewar frontiers. At the battle
of Kalimantsi on July 18, 1913, Bulgarian
troops gained a defensive success and
prevented the Serbian army from entering
the territory of prewar Bulgaria.
By then, however, the situation for
Bulgaria had worsened to the east and the
north. Taking advantage of the situation,
Romanian and Ottoman troops joined in the
attack on Bulgaria. The Romanians objected
to the establishment of a strong Bulgaria on
their southern frontier and sought compensation in the town of Silistra and in southern
Dobrudja (Dobrudzha). The Ottomans
sought to recover Adrianople. The Bulgarians found themselves attacked on all sides.
With their entire army committed to the
fight against the Greeks and Serbs, they
lacked forces with which to oppose
the invading Ottomans and Romanians.
The Ottomans reoccupied Adrianople on
July 23 without having to fire a shot. Romanian units advanced against no opposition
almost all the way to Sofia. The result was
a Bulgarian catastrophe.
With no aid forthcoming from any Great
Power, the Bulgarians had to seek terms.
Toward the end of the fighting, the Bulgarians
did gain two small successes. In the north, the
Bulgarian town of Vidin held out against a
Serbian attack. In the south, elements of the
Bulgarian Second Army surrounded the
Greek army advancing up the Struma River
in Kresna Gorge. Only the signing of an armistice on July 31 saved the Greek army and its
commander King Constantine from being
surrounded at Kresna Gorge.
These late successes did not ameliorate
the peace terms for Bulgaria. In the Treaty

27

28

Balkan Wars, 19121913, Causes

of Bucharest (August 10, 1913) with


Greece, Montenegro, and Serbia, and the
Treaty of Constantinople (September 30,
1913) with the Ottoman Empire, the Bulgarians had to acknowledge complete defeat
and the loss of much of the gains from the
First Balkan War. For the second time in
35 years, the Bulgarian dream of Macedonia
turned into a nightmare. The Second Balkan
War left Serbia as Russias only important
client on the Balkan Peninsula. It also reoriented Bulgaria from Russian patronage
toward Austria-Hungary and Germany.
Both of these consequences were important
in the development of World War I. Russia
had to support Serbia in July 1914 or risk
exclusion from the Balkan Peninsula.
Bulgaria joined the Central Powers in
September 1915.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Bulgaria in the Balkan Wars; Bucharest, Treaty of, 1913; Constantinople, Treaty
of, 1913; Greece in the Balkan Wars; Kalimantsi, Battle of, 1913; Montenegro in the
Balkan Wars; Ottoman Empire in the Balkan
Wars; Romania in the Balkan Wars; Serbia in
the Balkan Wars

Further Reading
Hall, Richard C. The Balkan Wars, 1912
1913: Prelude to the First World War.
London: Routledge, 2000.
Hellenic Army General Staff. A Concise History of the Balkan Wars, 19121913.
Athens: Army History Directorate, 1998.
Helmreich, E. C. The Diplomacy of the Balkan
Wars, 19121913. Cambridge, MA:
Harvard University Press, 1938.

Balkan Wars, 19121913, Causes


The First Balkan War of 19121913 was a
sharp and bloody conflict in southeastern
Europe that led to World War I. Most of

southeastern Europe had come under


Ottoman domination by the end of the fourteenth century. Only Montenegro maintained a precarious independence from
Ottoman rule. By the first half of the nineteenth century, Greece, Serbia, and Romania
established independent regimes.
After their defeat of the Ottoman Empire
in the Russo Turkish War of 18771878,
the Russians established a large Bulgarian
state in the Treaty of San Stefano of
March 3, 1878. Objections from AustriaHungary and Great Britain caused a revision
of the settlement at the Congress of Berlin in
July 1878. San Stefano Bulgaria was trisected into a Bulgarian principality under
the nominal suzerainty of the Ottoman
sultan, the Ottoman province of Eastern
Rumelia with an Orthodox Christian governor, and Macedonia under the direct rule of
the Ottoman sultan. Montenegro, Romania,
and Serbia received formal Great Power recognition as states independent of all ties to
the Ottoman Empire. Thereafter, all the
Balkan states sought to overturn the Berlin
settlement to realize their nationalist goals
within the Ottoman Empire. The political
elite of all of these states were convinced
that only by attaining their nationalist objectives could they develop as modern states. In
this thinking, Germany and Italy served as
examples. These states, including Bulgaria,
Greece, Montenegro, and Serbia, all harbored irredentist aspirations against the
Ottomans. Many of these aspirations overlapped, especially in Macedonia. Bulgarian,
Greek and Serbian nationals all claimed
Macedonia as a part of their national irredentas. All of the Balkan states sponsored
cultural efforts as was as armed bands in
Macedonia.
For some time these rivalries precluded
the formation of a Balkan alliance directed
against the Ottomans. The Young Turk

Balkan Wars, 19121913, Causes

revolution in 1908 and its objective of an


Ottoman revival, however, engendered
closer cooperation among these Balkan
states. An opportunity for the realization of
their nationalist objectives arose when the
weakness of the Ottomans became apparent
during the Italo-Ottoman War of 1911
1912. The Albanian uprisings that had
begun in 1910 also demonstrated the feeble
condition of the Ottoman state.
With the support of Russia, which sought
to regain the position lost in southeastern
Europe during the Bosnian Crisis of 1908

1909, Bulgaria and Serbia signed an alliance


in March 1912. This alliance contained provisions for the rough division of Ottoman
territories. It recognized Bulgarian claims
in Thrace and Serbian claims in Albania. It
also included a provision for a partition of
Macedonia into a Bulgarian zone and a
contested zone in northwestern Macedonia to be arbitrated by the Russian czar
if Macedonian autonomy proved to be
unworkable. Bulgaria and Serbia then
signed bilateral agreements with Greece
and Montenegro during the spring and

29

30

Balkan Wars, 19121913, Causes

summer of 1912. Other than the BulgarianSerbian agreement, the Balkan allies made
little effort to arrange division of any territories conquered from the Ottomans. The Bulgarians in particular had little confidence in
the Greek army and were convince that
they could realize their objectives in Macedonia ahead of the Greeks. Bulgarias failure to delineate its claims in Macedonia
with Greece led to great complications after
the First Balkan War and was a major
cause of the Second Balkan War.
While the First Balkan War arose from
the strong desire of the Orthodox Christian
governments in the Balkans to realize their
nationalist claims to Ottoman territory, the
Second Balkan War came about because of
conflicting claims to Ottoman territory, especially Macedonia. During the initial phase of
the First Balkan War, Serbian troops overran
northern Albania and most of Macedonia. In
December 1912, Austria-Hungary made its
opposition to a Serbian presence in northern
Albania clear. The realization that they could
not realize their claims to northern Albania
made the Serbs determined to hold on to the
parts of Macedonia they had occupied,
despite the 1912 treaty with Bulgaria. In
1913, the Serbs requested a revision of the
1912 treaty. The Bulgarians, still fighting at
Adrianople, ignored the Serbian request. By
March 1913, Bulgarian and Greek soldiers
were skirmishing in contested regions of
Macedonia. On May 5, Greece and Serbia
concluded an alliance directed against
Bulgaria.
Meanwhile, the Romanians pressed
their claims for compensation from Bulgaria. As the largest Orthodox Christian state
in southeastern Europe, the Romanians
regarded themselves as the gendarme of
the Balkans. As the extent of the Balkan
League victories became clear, the Romanians sought to maintain their position in

the Balkans by seeking compensation in


Bulgarian Dobrudja (Dobrudzha). After
their military successes against the
Ottomans, the Bulgarians were reluctant to
part with any of their own territory. A Great
Powers ambassadors conference in St.
Petersburg on May 8, 1913 awarded the
northeastern Bulgarian town of Silistra to
Romania. This decision left both Bulgaria
and Romania dissatisfied. When the Bulgarians became embroiled in conflict with their
allies, the Romanians utilized the circumstances to seize not only Silistra but all of
Bulgarian Dobrudja.
After the signing of the treaty of London,
the Bulgarians quickly transferred the bulk
of their army from Thrace to Macedonia to
enforce their claims against the Greeks and
Serbs. Discontent at the long time of service
without respite emerged in the Bulgarian
ranks. The command urged the government
to use the army or to send it home. On
the night of June 2930, Czar Ferdinand
(18611948) ordered General Mihail Savov
(18571928) to take action. Savov then
ordered the army to undertake local attacks
to improve its tactical position. These
attacks against the Greeks and Serbs began
the Second Balkan War.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Albanian Uprisings, 19101911;
Contested Zone (Macedonia), 1912; Savov,
Mihail (18571928)

Further Reading
Hall, Richard C. The Balkan Wars, 1912
1913: Prelude to the First World War.
London: Routledge, 2000.
Helmreich, E. C. The Diplomacy of the Balkan
Wars, 19121913. Cambridge, MA:
Harvard University Press, 1938.
Thadden, Edward C. Russia and the Balkan
Alliance of 1912. University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, 1965.

Balkan Wars, 19121913, Consequences

Balkan Wars, 19121913,


Consequences
The two Balkan Wars changed the map of
southeastern Europe. A fragile Albanian
state emerged, largely dependent on the
Great Powers. They did not determine its
final borders until the Council of Florence
in February 1914. Even then, Greek and
Serbian armed bands encroached on the
territory of the new state.
The big winners were Greece and Serbia.
Greece obtained clear title to Crete and
also obtained Epirus, including the city of
Janina; a large portion of southern and
western Macedonia, including Salonika;
and the Aegean Islands. These areas added
around two million people to the Greek population. Serbia acquired Kosovo and much
of Macedonia, almost doubling its territory
and adding almost two million to its
population. Significantly, much of this new
population was not Serbian. Serbia and
Montenegro divided the sanjak of Novi
Pazar between them. Montenegro also
gained small areas on its southern border
with the new Albanian state. Bulgaria, even
after defeat in the Second Balkan War,
gained the Rhodope region, central Thrace
including the insignificant Aegean port of
Dedeagach, and a piece of Macedonia
around Petrich. Much of the population of
these regions was not Bulgarian. These people included Greeks, Pomaks (Bulgarianspeaking Muslims), and Turks. Romania
obtained southern (Bulgarian) Dobrudja
(Dobrudzha). In this region of mixed ethnicity, there were relatively few Romanians.
The Ottoman Empire, which had held large
European territories since the fourteenth
century, was almost totally eliminated from
Europe by the Treaty of London. In the Second Balkan War, the Ottomans managed to

regain eastern Thrace, which remained its


only possession in Europe.
The Balkan Wars created major population movements. Victorious Bulgarian
armies in Thrace and Serbian armies in
Kosovo and the sanjak of Novi Pazar committed atrocities against the Muslim populations of these regions. This caused some
Muslims to seek safety in Constantinople
and in Albania. After the Second Balkan
War, pro-Bulgarian Macedonians moved
out of Greek- and Serbian-controlled
areas. Some Bulgarians also left southern
Dobrudzha after the Romanian occupation.
The Balkan Wars were the first armed
conflicts on European soil in the twentieth
century and in many ways presaged World
War I. Mass attacks against entrenched positions, concentrated artillery barrages, and
military use of airplanes made their first
appearances in European warfare. Losses to
disease among both civilians and military
personnel were significant. These presaged
the great influenza epidemic of World War
I. The larger European powers mainly
ignored the lessons of the Balkan Wars.
There was not enough time between the
end of the Second Balkan War and the opening of World War I to process information.
Nor did many of the General Staffs of the
Great Powers think that the experience of
the Balkan states had anything to teach
them.
The two wars resulted in at least
150,000 military dead, with the Bulgarians
and Ottomans suffering the heaviest losses.
Many more soldiers were wounded and
missing. The armies of the Balkan League
killed thousands of mainly Muslim civilians
during the First Balkan War. Ottoman
armies in retreat vented their frustration on
local Orthodox Christian populations.
During the Second Balkan War, Bulgarian

31

32

Balkan Wars, 19121913, Naval Campaigns

troops killed Greek civilians and Greek and


Serbian soldiers killed Bulgarian and
pro-Bulgarian Macedonian civilians. These
wars also brought about the deaths from disease of tens of thousands of civilians.
The Balkan Wars left a legacy of frustration for the Bulgarians and Ottomans,
providing a basis for continued conflict in
World War I. For the Bulgarians, the loss of
Macedonia for a second time, was especially
frustrating. San Stefano and Bucharest
became conflated. They sought redress on
the side of the Central Powers in World
War I, where they would again lose Macedonia for a third time. Likewise, the Ottomans
sought to regain some of their lost possessions, and contemplated war against Greece
in the spring of 1914. They too found themselves fighting on the side of the Central
Powers in World War I.
Montenegro had almost doubled its population and territory in the Balkan Wars.
Montenegrin gains, however, were not the
result of the success of Montenegrin arms.
The wars had demonstrated the antiquated
nature of King Nikolas (18411921) personal regime and the deficiencies of the
Montenegrin army. In the competition
between the Montenegrin Petrovich dynasty
and the Serbian Karageorgevic dynasty for
leadership of the Serbian national cause,
the latter emerged as the clear winner as a
result of the Balkan Wars.
The Balkan Wars also imparted a sense of
inflated national success among the Greeks,
Romanians, and Serbs. On two occasions
during the Balkan Wars, Austria-Hungary
had resorted to threats of force against Serbia to protect Albania. The Austrians would
make one more such threat in October 1913
before finally resorting to force. Less than a
year after the signing of the Treaty of
Bucharest, war again erupted in southeastern Europe after the assassination of

Archduke Francis Ferdinand (18631914)


in Sarajevo by a Bosnian Serb terrorist.
This time, the Third Balkan War metamorphosed into World War I.
Within the next five years, all of the participants in the Balkan Wars would become
involved in further disastrous and costly
conflicts. Many of the same battlefields of
the Balkan Wars, such as Gallipoli and
Doiran, again saw fighting. During World
War I, the populations of southeastern
Europe again made great sacrifices for the
nationalist aims of the political elite.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Bulgaria in the Balkan Wars; Greece
in the Balkan Wars; Montenegro in the Balkan
Wars; Romania in the Balkan Wars; Serbia in
the Balkan Wars

Further Reading
Hall, Richard C. The Balkan Wars, 1912
1913: Prelude to the First World War.
London: Routledge, 2000.
Helmreich, E. C. The Diplomacy of the Balkan
Wars, 19121913. Cambridge, MA:
Harvard University Press, 1938.
International Commission to Inquire into the
Causes and Conduct of the Balkan Wars.
The Other Balkan Wars. Washington, DC:
Carnegie Endowment, 1993.
Kiraly, Bela K., and Dimitrije Djordevic, eds.
East Central European Society and the
Balkan Wars. Boulder, CO: Social Science
Monographs, 1987.

Balkan Wars, 19121913,


Naval Campaigns
The naval campaigns of the Balkan Wars
were of secondary importance to the land
fighting. Of the Balkan allies, only Greece
had a significant navy. The pride of the
Greek fleet was the armored cruiser Georgios Averof. In addition the Greeks had

Balli Kombetar

16 modern destroyers, 19 old torpedo boats,


and a small submarine, the Delphin. The
Bulgarians had only six torpedo boats and a
gunboat, the Nadezhda. All of the Bulgarian
vessels operated only in the Black Sea. The
Serbs and Montenegrins had no navies. The
Ottomans had a number of older warships,
including two armored cruisers, six armored
ships, 11 torpedo destroyers, and 30 torpedo
ships. Its modern vessels were the light
cruiser Hamidiye and the armored cruiser
Mecidiye.
The Greek navy assumed two main objectives. The first was to blockade the Ottoman
coast and to contain the Ottoman navy in the
Dardanelles and thus prevent the transport
of Ottoman reinforcements from Anatolia
to the Balkan Fronts. This was a major factor in Bulgarian calculations for an alliance
with the Greeks. The second Greek naval
objective was the seizure of the Aegean
Islands from the Ottomans. In these two
tasks, the Greeks succeeded. By the end of
1912, the Greeks had taken all of the Aegean
Islands except Samos, which they occupied
in March 1913. The Greeks also used their
navy and merchant marine to transport Bulgarian troops to Dedeagach and Serbian
troops to San Giovanni di Medua, (Albanian: Shengjin) Albania.
The largest naval engagement of the Balkan Wars occurred on December 16, 1912,
at the Dardanelles. At that time Greeks
defeated an Ottoman attempt to break out
into the Aegean. A second attempt two
days later also failed. Neither fleet suffered
extensive damage, but the Greeks managed
to contain the Ottomans in the Dardanelles.
Despite the overall Greek success,
the Ottomans did enjoy some successes
with their navy. Naval fire from Ottoman
warships in both the Black Sea and the
Sea of Marmara helped to thwart the
Bulgarian attack on the Chataldzha lines on

November 17, 1912, and thus prevent the


Bulgarian occupation of Constantinople.
Also the Ottoman cruiser Hamidiye
managed to elude the Greek blockade
of the Dardanelles on December 22, 1912.
It proceeded to cruise the Mediterranean.
It sunk the Greek auxiliary cruiser Makedonia in Syra harbor in the Cyclades on January 15 and attacked a Greek transport ship
carrying Serbian troops at San Giovanni di
Medua, Albania, on March 18, 1913, causing heavy casualties. While the Hamidiyes
exploits heartened the Ottomans, they had
little effect on the outcome of the war.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Balkan War, First, 19121913;
Greece in the Balkan Wars; Ottoman Empire
in the Balkan Wars

Further Reading
Fotakis, Zisis. Greek Naval Strategy and Policy,
19101919. London: Routledge, 2005.
Hall, Richard C. The Balkan Wars, 1912
1913: Prelude to the First World War.
London: Routledge, 2000.
Hellenic Army General Staff. A Concise History of the Balkan Wars, 19121913.
Athens: Army History Directorate, 1998.

Balli Kombetar
The Balli Kombetar (BK) or National Front
was a nationalist resistance movement in
Albania during World War II. It arose in
1942 out of concerns by conservative Albanian nationalists about the growth of the
Communist resistance movement. The BK
also opposed the return of King Zog
(18951961), who had fled Albania during
the Italian invasion of 1939, and sought to
include Kosovo in its postwar borders.
They also represented the established economic and social interests of the country.

33

34

Berlin, Treaty of, 1878

A meeting between BK and Communists


took place at Mukaj in August 1943 failed
to result in a lasting arrangement. Soon
afterward in September, most of the Italian
occupation troops in Albania surrendered to
the Germans. About the same time, the BK
was undercut by the establishment of a proZogist movement, the Legeliteri, who advocated the return of the king. Increasingly the
BK found itself constrained by the betterequipped, Communist-led Partisan army
(ANLA), which received Allied help. This
caused the BK to rely on German support.
By 1944, the BK was in a position not
unlike that of the C etniks in neighboring
Yugoslavia. Both were anti-Communist
nationalists whose anti-Communism forced
them to compromise their relations with
their occupiers. The German withdrawal
from the Balkan Peninsula beginning in
October 1944 doomed the BK. The BK
always found greater support in the
conservative north of Albania. Fighting continued there until the end of 1944. By 1945,
the Communists were in control of all Albania. The Communists opposed the BK on the
left, and the Legeliteri opposed them on the
right. Because of this and its reliance on
the Germans, the BK failed to develop an
effective resistance alternative to the Communists in Albania.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Albania in World War II; Partisans,
Albania; Zog, King of the Albanians (1895
1961)

Further Reading
Fischer, Bernd. Albania at War, 19391945.
West Lafayette, IN: Purdue University
Press, 1999.
Jelavich, Barbara. History of the Balkans.
Vol. 2, Twentieth Century. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 1983.

Vickers, Miranda. The Albanians: A Modern


History. London: I. B. Tauris, 1995.

Berlin, Treaty of, 1878


The Treaty of Berlin was the final act of the
Congress of Berlin, June 13July 13, 1878,
by which Britain, Austria-Hungary, France,
Germany, and Italy revised the Treaty of
San Stefano, signed earlier on March 3,
that Russia had imposed on a defeated
Ottoman Empire.
On April 24, 1877, Russia, the selfdeclared protector of the Slavic nationalities
in the Balkans, declared war on the Ottoman
Empire. By the end of 1877, Russia, after
fighting in the Balkans and the Caucasus
Mountains, had defeated the Ottoman
armies and was advancing on Constantinople. On January 31, 1878, Russia accepted
an Ottoman truce offer. On March 3, at San
Stefano, Russian negotiators dictated a
treaty that recognized the independence
of Romania, Serbia, Montenegro, and a
Greater Bulgaria.
The Great Powers, alarmed at an independent and pro-Russian Greater Bulgaria,
called the Congress of Berlin to modify this
treaty. They established two separate
autonomous principalities, Bulgaria and
Eastern Rumelia, and returned the Macedonian region to Ottoman rule, undoing Russias plans for a Greater Bulgaria. The new
treaty also recognized the independence of
Romania, Serbia, and Montenegro. Finally,
Austria-Hungary would administer the Ottoman province of Bosnia-Herzegovina and
the Sanjak of Novi Pazar, territorially still a
part of the Ottoman Empire. A provision of
the treaty that would serve as a model for
the League of Nations Minorities System
provided special legal status to some religious groups and to non-Turkish minorities.

Bessarabia

The three newly independent states subsequently proclaimed themselves kingdoms


(Romania in 1881, Serbia in 1882, and
Montenegro in 1910). Bulgaria united
with Eastern Rumelia in 1885 and
proclaimed full independence in 1908.
Austria-Hungary annexed Bosnia in 1908,
sparking another major crisis.
Robert B. Kane
See also: Pleven, Siege of, 1877; RussoOttoman War, 18771878; San Stefano,
Treaty of, 1878

Further Reading
Albrecht-Carre, Rene. A Diplomatic History of
Europe since the Congress of Vienna. New
York: Harper & Brothers, 1958.
Langer, William L. European Alliances and
Alignments, 18711890. 2nd ed. New
York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1950.
Taylor, A. J. P. The Struggle for the Mastery
of Europe, 18481918. Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 1954.

Bessarabia
Bessarabia is a southeastern European
territory covering some 17,600 square
miles in present-day Moldavia and Ukraine,
bounded by the Prut, Danube, and Dneister
Rivers and the Black Sea. Its population in
1945 was approximately 2 million. Moldavians made up about 50 percent of the population, while Ukrainians were 20 percent;
the remainder were Russians, Germans,
Bulgarians, and Jews.
Until 1812, Bessarabia, which was named
for the Bassarab dynasty that ruled much of
Wallachia in the fourteenth and fifteenth
centuries, formed the eastern boundary of
Moldavia, a vassal state of the Ottoman
Empire. In the Treaty of Bucharest of
May 1812, Russia annexed Bessarabia, and

it remained part of the Russian Empire until


1918. Bessarabia was briefly independent
following the end of World War I but chose
to join Romania. This decision was confirmed
by the Allied powers, which formally awarded
the territory to Romania in 1920 as an additional buffer against Communist Russia. The
Russian government, however, continued to
regard Bessarabia as its own territory.
In June 1940, in accordance with the
German-Soviet Non-Aggression Pact of
August 23, 1939, the Soviet Union annexed
Bessarabia and, that August, formed much
of it into the Moldavian Soviet Socialist
Republic (MSSR), although portions of it
were also awarded to the Ukrainian Soviet
Socialist Republic (SSR). The Soviets also
deported significant numbers of Bessarabians to Siberia. Romania retook Bessarabia
following the Axis invasion of the Soviet
Union in June 1941 in which Romanian
forces participated. Approximately 65,000
of 75,000 Jews living in Bessarabia perished
during the Holocaust.
The Soviet Union regained the region at
the end of World War II. Although Romania
became a Communist state and entered the
Soviet bloc after the war, there was continued acrimony between the Soviet Union
and Romania over Bessarabia. With the
collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, the
MSSR declared itself independent and
became the Republic of Moldova. Many in
Romania continued to believe, however,
that Moldova should be part of Romania.
Spencer C. Tucker
See also: Romania in World War I; Romania
in World War II; Transnistrian War, 1991

Further Reading
Cioranescu, George. Bessarabia: Disputed
Land between East and West. Munich: Ion
Dumitru Verlag, 1985.

35

36

Bihac
Dobrinescu, Valeriu Florin. The Diplomatic
Struggle over Bessarabia. Iasi: Center for
Romanian Studies, 1996.
King, Charles. The Moldovans, Romania, Russia and the Politics of Culture. Stanford,
CA: Hoover Institution Press, 2000.

Bihac
Bihac is a city in the Cazinska Krajina
region of northwestern Bosnia of around
40,000 inhabitants that was the center of
extensive fighting during the Yugoslav
Wars, 19911995. During World War II,
Bihac was a part of the independent state of
Croatia (NDH). It was the scene of Ustasa
atrocities. In 1942, it briefly served as the
Partisan headquarters, and on November 26,
1942 was the scene of the first Partisan
political conference. A German offensive
restored the city to NDH control, lasting
until 1945. In the early Tito years, Bihac
was a center of resistance to the efforts of
the regime to collectivize agriculture.
During the Yugoslav Wars, Bihac and the
surrounding region formed an island of Bosniak control amidst Serbian forces in Bosnia
and Croatia. A local Bosniak businessman
and politician, Fikret Abdic (1939), was
the leading figure in Bihac during this time.
Abdic was a charismatic individual known
as Babo (Daddy), who had been convicted
of corruption in 1987 and imprisoned. At the
beginning of the fighting in Sarajevo in
April 1992, he participated in a failed
attempt to oust the Izetbegovic government.
He then returned to his home base in
northwestern Bosnia.
Isolated from the Bosnian government
in Sarajevo, Abdic ruled Bihac as his
own fiefdom. He proclaimed this to be the
Autonomous Province of Western Bosnia
(APWB). From Bihac he seems to have
interacted with both Croatian and Serbian

forces to his economic and political advantage. When the Bosnian Army Fifth Corps,
stationed in the Bihac pocket, attempted
to enforce the rule of Sarajevo, Abdic
maintained his independence with Serbian
assistance. Throughout the war, extensive
secret commercial undertakings among
the Bosnians, Croats, and Serbs in Bihac
undoubtedly enriched Abdic and his collaborators. This confused concept of all for all
and all against all became emblematic of the
Yugoslav Wars of 19911995. The joint
Bosnian-Croat offensive of August 1995
effectively ended the APWB and the rule of
Fikret Abdic, who then fled to Croatia. There
in 2000, the Croatian government put him on
trial. He served 10 years of a 15-year sentence. After his release, he resided in Croatia.
As of this writing, the Sarajevo government
continued to regard him as a traitor.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Izetbegovic , Alija (19252003);
Yugoslav Wars, 19911995; Yugoslav Wars,
19911995, Consequences

Further Reading
Silber, Laura, and Allen Little. Yugoslavia: Death
of a Nation. New York: Penguin, 1998.
Thomas, N., and K. Mikulan. The Yugoslav
Wars (2): Bosnia, Kosovo and Macedonia
19922001. Botely, Oxford: Osprey, 2006.
U.S. Central Intelligence Agency. Balkan
Battlegrounds: A Military History of the
Yugoslav Conflict, 19901995. 2 vols. Washington, DC: Central Intelligence Agency,
20022003.

Black Hand
The Black Hand was a common name
for the Serbian nationalist organization
dedicated to the establishment of a Serbian
state including the Serbian populations
of the Habsburg and Ottoman Empires.

Black Sea Campaign, 19411944

Although Serbia achieved independence


n 1878, nationalists were outraged that
Austria-Hungary controlled Slavic territory
in the Balkans. Relations with AustriaHungary worsened after 1903 and especially
after Viennas 1908 annexation of BosniaHerzegovina. Two days later, a group of
Serbian nationalists formed a semisecret,
nationalist public patriotic society, the Narodna Odbrana (National Defense).
On May 9, 1911, a new group met to form
Ujedinjenje ili Smrt (Unification or Death),
also known as the Crna Ruka (Black
Hand). This group was led by Colonel Dragutin Dimitrijevic (18761917), known as
Apis after the ancient Egyptian bull god.
It was prepared to employ violent methods
to achieve the goal of a Greater Serbia.
Organized into cells, the group took part in
comitadji (guerrilla) warfare in Macedonia,
anti-Austrian operations in Bosnia, and
political assassinations. Trading on the prestige of Narodna Odbrana, the Black Hand
became a major force in Serbian domestic
politics. It attempted the assassination of
Austrian emperor Franz Joseph in 1911 and
organized the assassination of Archduke
Franz Ferdinand in Sarajevo on June 28,
1914, supplying weapons to the young Bosnian terrorists. This was done apparently in
the expectation that the resulting crisis
would force Russian intervention to support
Serbia and allow Serbia to make gains at
the expense of Austria-Hungary.
After checking three Austro-Hungarian
invasions in 1914, the Serbs retreated from
their country in the face of a combined
Austro-Hungarian, Bulgarian, and German
onslaught in the fall of 1915. The remnants
of the Serbian army recuperated on the
Greek island of Corfu. In the summer of
1916, they formed a contingent in the
Entente force at Salonika where they fought
along the Balkan Front.

In late 1916, Serbian prime minister Nicola Pasic (18451926) decided to destroy
the Black Hand, probably both to remove a
threat to his authority and to keep its activities a secret. Crown Prince Alexander also
feared the power of Apis and his organization. The groups leaders were arrested and
brought to trial at Salonika in May 1917.
They stood accused of plotting the assassination of Crown Prince Alexander and of
seeking to overthrow the Serbian monarchy.
While many received prison sentences, Apis
along with Rade Malobabic and Ljubomir
Vulovic were executed by firing squad on
June 26. The organization survived, however, and was reborn as the White Hand,
another secretive Serbian nationalist group
that continued on in the new state of Yugoslavia. In 1953, the Serbian Supreme Court
exonerated all of the Salonika defendants.
Timothy L. Francis
See also: Dimitrijevic, Dragutin (18761917);
Sarajevo Assassination, 1914; Serbia in World
War I

Further Reading
Albertini, Luigi. The Origins of the War of
1914. 3 vols. London: Oxford University
Press, 19521957.
Cassels, Lavender. The Archduke and the
Assassin: Sarajevo, June 28th 1914. New
York: Stein and Day, 1985.
MacKenzie, David. The Black Hand on
Trial: Salonika, 1917. Boulder, CO: East
European Monographs, 1995.
Remak, Joachim. Sarajevo: The Story of a Political Murder. New York: Criterion, 1959.

Black Sea Campaign, 19411944


The Black Sea campaign involved Soviet
forces defending against attacking Axis
powers led by Nazi Germany. Within the

37

38

Black Sea Campaign, 19411944

Axis coalition, and taking part in action


within the Black Sea Theater, were the navies
and armies of Bulgaria, Romania, and Italy.
During World War II, Hitlers Germany surprised the Soviet armed forces when it
attacked on June 22, 1941, during Operation
Barbarossa. Overall, the intent was to drive
the Soviet Communists far enough from
Europe as to allow two strategic objectives.
One was resource-oriented, and the second
was concerned with the military defense of
the German homeland. The first strategic
objective was to secure the agricultural
resources of the Ukraine located just north of
the Black Sea and to secure the petroleum
resources of the Middle East and those located
in and around the Caucasus region located on
the eastern side of the seawith a particular
focus on the oil fields around Baku,
Azerbaijan. To the German leadership, economic self-sufficiency was essential for
national security. The second strategic objective was to push Soviet air power out of
range of the German homeland.
On the opening day of Operation Barbarossa, German Luftwaffe aircraft conducted
mine-laying operations off the home port of
the Soviet Black Sea fleet at Sevastopol
located on the Crimea. Four days later, on
June 26, 1941, the Soviets bombed and
shelled the Romanian port at Constanta
with nine naval aircraft of the Black Sea
Fleet in conjunction with a surface flotilla
led by the Moskva and Kharkov. In this
engagement, the Soviet destroyer leader
Moskva was sunk by mines while attempting
to dodge incoming rounds from coastal batteries. The Romanian destroyers Regina
Maria and Marasti were involved in the battle and conducted operations against the
Kharkov and the Moskva.
As the war progressed, Soviet submarines
also raided Axis shipping along the Bulgarian and Romanian coasts. While the Soviets

began with a numerical superiority in ships


within the theater, German air power, particularly the diving bombing Stukas, eventually took its toll. By 1943, the Black Sea
Fleet had been reduced to one battleship,
the Sevastopol; four cruisers; one destroyer
leader, the Kharkov; eight other destroyers;
and 29 submarines. By 1944, the surface
vessels of the Soviet fleet were unable to
mount any sustained operations due to damages inflicted and the inability to generate
repairs.
Axis forces had successfully pushed
the Soviets back across the Black Sea to
the Caucasus during 19411943, taking the
naval port of Sevastopol on July 4, 1942.
Joining German forces in driving the Soviets
back to the Caucasus were the Romanian
military units the 10th and 19th Infantry
Divisions and 3rd Mountain Division.
During this time, the Kharkov and two
destroyers were sunk by Stukas. Stalin then
ordered that any further use of large ships
would have to be authorized by his office.
The tide began turning against the Axis
powers in 1944 and the Soviets pushed
back across the region, retaking the area
around Odessa in March and then forcing
the surrender of Axis forces near Sevastopol
on May 9, 1944.
James Brian McNabb
See also: Romania in World War II

Further Reading
Axworthy, Mark, Cornel Scafes, and Cristian
Craciunoiu. Third Axis, Fourth Ally: Romanian Armed Forces in the European War,
19411945. London: Arms and Armour,
1995.
Glantz, David M. When Titans Clashed: How
the Red Army Stopped Hitler. Lawrence:
University Press of Kansas, 1995.
Roba, J. Louis. Seaplanes over the Black
Sea: German Romanian Operations, 1941

Boris III, Czar of Bulgaria


1944. Bucharest: Editura Modelism
International Ltd., 1998.
Stolfi, Russell H. S. Hitlers Panzers East:
World War II Reinterpreted. Norman:
University of Oklahoma Press, 1991.

Boris III, Czar of Bulgaria


(18941943)
Czar of Bulgaria whose country, though
nominally an Axis power, remained autonomous throughout the war years, Boris III
was born Boris Klemens Robert Maria Pius
Ludwig Stanislaus Xaver, prince of SaxeCoburg and Gotha, duke of Saxony, and
prince of Tirnovo, at the royal palace in
Sofia on January 30, 1894. His father was
Czar Ferdinand (18611948), who had
been ruling since 1887. His mother, Princess
Maria Luisa of Bourbon Parma (1870
1899), died while giving birth to his youngest sibling. Boris was educated by palace
tutors and married Princess Giovanna of
Savoy (19072000), daughter of King Victor Emmanuel III (18691947) of Italy, in
1930. They had two children, Maria Luisa
(1933) and Crown Prince Simeon (1937).
Boris rose to power following his fathers
abdication on October 3, 1918, at the end of
World War I. Bulgaria was then in desperate
straits. The 1919 Treaty of Neuilly involved
loss of territory and the payment of reparations. As a consequence of his countrys
many problems, Boris experienced an
exceptionally stormy reign. The 1920s were
filled with internal political strife, and economic problems forced Bulgaria to depend
on Germany for supplies.
Boris favored a neutralist course for his
country. He proved to be an adept diplomat
and an intelligent yet cautious leader who
was genuinely respected by his people for
his skillful handling of the many problems

Boris III was the last real king of Bulgaria and


played an important role during World War
II. (Library of Congress)

besetting the kingdom. He was an unwilling


junior partner in the Axis alliance during
World War II. Pressured into joining the
alliance by Germany, Boris regained the
southern Dobrudja (Dobrudzha; Dobruja)
region from Romania in 1940, which led to
his being known as the King Unifier and
the Liberator Tsar.
By 1941, Boris had little choice but to
commit to the Axis powers and allow
German troops to cross through his country
en route to the Soviet Union. Unlike the
other Balkan states, Bulgaria remained
autonomous during the war. Although it did
not invade Yugoslavia or Greece, its troops
did garrison parts of Macedonia and western
Thrace. In December, Bulgaria declared war
on the United States and Britain, but Boris
infuriated Adolf Hitler by withholding
Bulgarian troops from the war effort and
refusing to declare war on the Soviet Union
or send Bulgarian Jews to the death camps.

39

40

Bosnia, Austrian Occupation, 1878

His actions helped save 50,000 Jews. Boris


and Giovanna also arranged for transit visas
permitting thousands of other Jews to go to
Palestine.
Boriss continuous obduracy regarding
German policies led to a stormy meeting
with Hitler at the latters Wolfsschanze
headquarters near Rastenburg on August 14,
1943, in which Boris bluntly said that Bulgaria would follow its own path. He returned
to Sofia depressed over the probable eventual fate of his country. Boris died at the
royal palace in Sofia two weeks later, on
August 28, 1943, most likely from an embolism, although there were suspicions he had
been poisoned. A regency then took power
on behalf of the underage Czar Simeon II,
who reigned until he was deposed on
September 9, 1946.
Annette Richardson
See also: Bulgaria in World War I; Bulgaria in
World War II; Military League (Bulgaria);
Radomir Rebellion, 1918

Further Reading
Crampton, R. J. A Concise History of Bulgaria.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
1997.
Groueff, Stephan. Crown of Thorns: The Reign
of King Boris III of Bulgaria, 19181943.
Lanham, MD: Madison Books, 1987.
Lalkov, Milcho. Rulers of Bulgaria. Sofia:
Kibea Publishing, 1997.

Bosnia, Austrian Occupation,


1878
In 1878, Austria-Hungary occupied the
Ottoman provinces of Bosnia and Herzegovina in accordance with the Treaty of Berlin.
After defeating the Ottoman Empire in
the Russo-Ottoman War of 18771878,
Russia imposed the Treaty of San Stefano
on the Ottoman Empire. The treaty granted

independence to Romania, Serbia, and


Montenegro; established an autonomous
greater Bulgaria; and made Bosnia and
Herzegovina an autonomous province. However, the European powers believed that this
treaty would upset the balance of power in
the Balkans and met in Berlin from June 13
to July 13, 1878, to modify its provisions.
The resulting Treaty of Berlin, among other
things, allowed Austria-Hungary to administer
Bosnia and Herzegovina (and the Sanjak of
Novi Pazar), although these provinces
remained territorially a part of the Ottoman
Empire.
In June 1878, Austria-Hungary mobilized
over 82,000 troops to occupy the provinces
and established a reserve army in Dalmatia.
The Ottoman army in Bosnia and Herzegovina at the time consisted of roughly
40,000 troops and about 53,000 local militia. The Austro-Hungarian troops met sporadic fierce opposition from portions of
both the Muslim and Orthodox populations
and fought pitched battles near Citluk, Stolac, Livno, and Klobuk. Despite setbacks at
Maglaj and Tuzla, the Austro-Hungarian
army occupied Sarajevo, the Bosnian
capital, in October 1878. Resistance to the
occupation force ended after three weeks of
fighting and cost the Austro-Hungarians
over 5,000 casualties.
Tensions remained in certain parts of the
country, particularly Herzegovina, and a
large number of Muslim dissidents left. With
the establishment of relative stability, AustroHungarian authorities instituted a number of
social and administrative reforms intended to
make Bosnia and Herzegovina into a model
colony. Habsburg rule eventually led to the
codification of laws, the introduction of new
political practices, and the start of modernization, aimed at establishing the province as a
stable political entity that would help dissipate
rising South Slav nationalism.

Bosnian Crisis, 19081909

In 1908, Austria-Hungary formally


annexed the territory, which precipitated a
new Bosnian crisis and created the Condominium of Bosnia and Herzegovina that
lasted until the end of World War I.
Robert B. Kane
See also: Berlin, Treaty of, 1878; Bosnian
Crisis, 19081909; Russo-Ottoman War,
18771878; San Stefano, Treaty of, 1878;
Sarajevo Assassination, 1914

Further Reading
Jelavich, Barbara. History of the Balkans. 2
vols. Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 1983.
Jelavich, Charles, and Barbara Jelavich. The
Establishment of the Balkan National
States, 18041920. Seattle: University of
Washington Press, 1977.
Langer, William L. European Alliances
and Alignments, 18711890. New York:
Knopf, 1950.
Shaw, Stanford J., and Ezel Kural Shaw. History of the Ottoman Empire and Modern
Turkey. Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 19761977.

Bosnian Crisis, 19081909


The Bosnian Crisis was a regional crisis that
resulted from the Austrian annexation of
Bosnia and Herzegovina in October 1908.
It produced significant tension between
Austria-Hungary and the Ottoman Empire
and, for several weeks early in 1909, threatened to cause a general European war.
By article 25 of the Treaty of Berlin of
1878, Austria-Hungary was permitted to
occupy and administer Bosnia and Herzegovina. This arrangement was made in consequence of an understanding between Russia
and the Dual Monarchy, entered into on the
eve of the Russo-Ottoman War of 1877
1878, and of the support given to the

Austro-Hungarian claims by Britain and


Germany at the Congress of Berlin. As the
provinces were inhabited chiefly by Serbs,
and as a route across that region would
afford Serbia the most convenient form of
the long-desired access to the Adriatic, the
Serbian agents at the Congress of Berlin
tried to protest against the arrangement.
But the congress would not even hear the
protest.
From the beginning of the occupation,
Austria-Hungary counted upon ultimately
obtaining permanent possession. Serbia,
however, continued to hope that the provinces, or at least such a portion of them as
would give access to the Adriatic, would
someday be in its hands. The crisis in
19081909 sprang from the fact that Serbia
believed that it must prevent the consummation of annexation by Austria-Hungary or
give up permanently its long-cherished
hopes.
Soon after the proclamation of annexation, Serbia called a part of the reserves to
the colors and lodged a vigorous protest
with the powers, demanding either a return
to the status quo ante or compensations calculated to assure the independence and
material progress of Serbia. Serbian newspapers demanded a strip of territory extending
across Novi Pazar and Bosnia-Herzegovina
to the Adriatic. The Government of the
Dual Monarchy refused to receive the Serbian protest. It denied that Serbia had any
right to raise a question as to the annexation.
For a time, the attitude of the powers was
uncertain. With the exception of Germany,
whose attitude at first was extremely
reserved, all of the powers objected to the
action of Austria-Hungary, but apparently
more to the form than to the fact of annexation. As the controversy developed, Germany came quickly and decidedly to the
support of its Austro-Hungarian ally.

41

42

Bosnian Crisis, 19081909

In Russia, public opinion expressed itself


strongly in support of Serbia. The Russian
government, which at first had shown a disposition to do no more than record a formal
protest against the infraction of the Treaty
of Berlin, responded by supporting the
demand first made by Turkey for an
international conference to consider the
matter. The British and Italian governments
then supported this demand with considerable vigor, while France sought to play a
conciliatory role.
Austria-Hungary declared that it was not
opposed on principle to a conference, but
made its acceptance depend upon the program for the conference, which, it insisted,
must be agreed upon in advance. It took the
position that the conference ought not to discuss the validity of the annexation, but
should confine itself to registering the measure as a fait accompli. Russia, after considerable exchange of opinion with the other
powers, submitted a project for a program,
which included an item dealing with advantages to be accorded to Serbia and Montenegro. Austria-Hungary, in reply, did not
flatly reject the Russian proposal, but suggested that the advantages for Serbia and
Montenegro should be economic only.
While the discussion was in progress, the
Austro-Hungarian government endeavored
to prevent the calling of the proposed
conference by settling its controversy with
Turkey. Such a settlement was arranged in
principle on January 12, 1909. After that,
Austria-Hungary claimed that there was no
longer any occasion for the meeting of a
conference.
Popular feeling in Serbia did not
abate. There was a strong demand that
opposition to the annexation should be
pushed vigorously. To avert the danger of
war, Russia proposed to the powers a collective de marche at Vienna and at Belgrade.

Germany promptly refused to take part,


while Austria-Hungary hastened to make
known that it would refuse to receive any
such proposition. Learning that France and
Britain were not inclined to lend their support, Russia quickly dropped the proposal.
The crisis was brought to a close in a
manner that involved a triumph for AustriaHungary over Serbia and for Germany and
Austria-Hungary over Russiaa triumph
that left behind it much bitterness of spirit
in the states that were forced to yield. The
humiliation that Russia and Serbia were
compelled to endure was undoubtedly a
very considerable factor in determining the
whole course of events which from that
date led directly to World War I. The precise
manner in which Serbia was forced to yield
was at the time veiled in a good deal of mystery, giving rise to numerous conflicting
accounts of just what happened. Complete
information is not yet available. It is clear,
however, that Russia, under some form of
strong pressure from Germany, was forced
to abandon Serbia. The kaiser subsequently
asserted that he stood beside his ally,
Austria-Hungary, in shining armor, while
Prince Berhard von Bu low (18491929)
declared that the German sword had been
thrown into the scale of European decision.
Even then Serbia yielded only under constraint from all the powers. Her humiliation
was recorded in the declaration she was
forced to send to Vienna (March 31, 1909):
Serbia recognizes that the situation created in Bosnia-Herzegovina does not
involve any injury to the rights of Serbia.
In consequence, Serbia will conform to
the decision which the powers are going
to take in regard to article 25 of the treaty
of Vienna. Serbia, conforming to the
advice of the powers agrees to renounce
the attitude of protest and opposition

Bosnian Forces

which she has taken since the month of


October of last year. She agrees to modify
the line of her political conduct in regard
to Austria-Hungary and to live in the
future on good terms with it. In conformity with this declaration and confident
of the pacific intentions of AustriaHungary, Serbia will bring back her
army, in the matter of organization, distribution, and of state of activity, to the situation existing in the spring of 1908.
She will disband the volunteer bodies
and will prevent the formation of irregular bands upon her territory.
Robert B. Kane
See also: Balkan Wars, 19121913, Causes;
Black Hand; Sarajevo Assassination, 1914

Further Reading
Bridge, F. R. From Sadowa to Sarajevo: The
Foreign Policy of Austria-Hungary, 1866
1914. London: Routledge, 1972.
Schmitt, Bernadotte E. The Annexation of
Bosnia, 19081909. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1937.

Bosnian Forces
Bosnian forces constituted the military
effort of the Bosnian government in the
Yugoslav Wars of 19911995. BosniaHerzegovina was most the most ethnically
mixed of all the Yugoslav republics. Bosnian
Muslims (Bosniaks) constituted around
44 percent of the population, Serbs around
31 percent, Croats around 17 percent, and
others the remainder.
The origins of the Bosnian forces lie in
the establishment by the Yugoslav Peoples
Army (JNA) of a territorial defense system
(TO). This was essentially a militia established at the republic level to supplement

JNA forces in case of a foreign invasion of


Yugoslavia. By the end of the 1980s, when
national tensions had reemerged in Yugoslavia, the Bosnian TO forces and their resources were largely under Serbian control.
Also, the president of Bosnia-Herzegovina
since December 20, 1990, Alija Izetbegovic
(19252003), discouraged the formation of
distinctly Bosnian forces in order not to
aggravate the delicate national balance in
Bosnia-Herzegovina among the Bosniak,
Serb, and Croat populations. He also sought
to maintain good relations with the Serbiandominated JNA. This meant that in the fall
of 1990, when the Serbian TO and other
Serbian-led organizations in Bosnia began
to attack Bosniak and Croatian areas of
Bosnia, the Bosnian state was woefully
unprepared to respond militarily.
The problem became acute after the
Bosnian declaration of independence on
March 3, 1992. Fighting erupted throughout
the country between pro-government and
pro-Serbian forces. On May 20, 1992, the
remaining Bosnian TO organization became
the Army of the Republic of Bosnia and
Herzegovina (ARBiH). The new army had
limited military resources to draw upon.
While most Bosnian males had received
military training due to compulsory service
in the JNA, most heavy weapons remained
under Serbian or pro-Serbian JNA control.
Initially the Bosnian forces contained members of all three nationalities. The initial
force that was hastily cobbled together had
about 80,000 lightly armed men in four
army corps under the command of Rasim
Delic (19492010), a former career officer
in the JNA.
Initially the ARBiH was multinational.
As the fighting intensified, however, and as
the news of widespread atrocities became
known, national fissures emerged. As the
Bosniaks became the chief victims of the

43

44

Bosnian Revolt, 1876

ethnic cleansing, murder, and rape, so did


the sense of ethnic Muslim identity grow
among Bosniak soldiers in the ARBiH. As
many as 3,000 volunteers arrived from Muslim countries to supplement its ranks. At the
same time, Serbian presence in the ARBiH,
never strong, diminished. Most Croats
joined separate units, which at times cooperated with the ARBiH and at other times
fought it. During much of this time, the
ARBiH struggled in the field, largely
because of the lack of sufficient arms and
equipment. By January 1995, the ARBiH
had expanded to almost 200,000 men. It
received some aid from Muslim countries
and from NATO. It participated in the successful operations of the summer and fall
of 1995 in cooperation with the Croatian
army.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Izetbegovic , Alija (19252003);
JNA (Yugoslav Peoples Army); Storm,
Operation; Sarajevo, Siege of, 19921995;
Yugoslav Wars, 19911995, Causes

Further Reading
Silber, Laura, and Allen Little. Yugoslavia:
Death of a Nation. New York: Penguin,
1998.
Tarnstrom, Ronald. Balkan Battles. Lindsbrog,
KS: Trogen, 1998.
Thomas, N., and K. Mikulan. The Yugoslav
Wars (2): Bosnia, Kosovo and Macedonia
19922001. Botely, Oxford: Osprey, 2006.
U.S. Central Intelligence Agency. Balkan
Battlegrounds: A Military History of the
Yugoslav Conflict, 19901995. 2 vols.
Washington, DC: Central Intelligence
Agency, 20022003.

Bosnian Revolt, 1876


The revolt that began in August 1876 in the
Ottoman province of Bosnia eventually led

to the Russo-Ottoman War of 18771878.


On July 5, 1875, peasants near Nevesinje,
Herzegovina, supported by urban workers
and the middle class, rebelled after Ottoman
tax collectors increased taxes. By August,
the number of insurgents had grown to
about 12,000, and the revolt had spread
across most of Herzegovina. On August 18,
the rebellion spread to nearby Bosnia.
Bosnian insurgents blockaded a number of
large cities and Ottoman fortresses and
quickly cleared a portion of territory in
southwestern Bosnia along the Austrian
border of Ottoman troops.
The insurgents generally wanted the
Ottoman administration to transfer land to
the peasants, establish a democratic system
of government, and unify Bosnia and
Herzegovina with Serbia and Montenegro,
respectively. The liberal middle class
limited its demands to the incorporation of
Bosnia into Serbia and Herzegovina into
Montenegro.
The uprising aroused public sympathy
throughout the Balkans and in Russia. The
rebels received moral, material, and financial support from several countries and
numerous volunteers from Russia, Serbia,
Croatia, Montenegro, Bulgaria, and Italy.
After Great Power mediation between the
Bosnians and Ottoman authorities failed,
Milan Obrenovic (18541901) of Serbia
and Prince Nicholas of Montenegro (1841
1921) declared war on the Ottoman Empire
on June 18, 1876. This war ended in early
November 1876 after Russia forced the
Ottoman sultan Abdulhamid II to sign a
truce with Serbia. However, the rebellion in
southwest Bosnia continued and had cleared
southern Bosnia of Ottoman forces by
mid-1877.
Because of Ottoman atrocities during
the rebellion, Russia declared war on
the Ottoman Empire on April 24, 1877.

Bosnian War, 19921995

This war ended on January 31, 1878, with a


Russian victory. Russia imposed the Treaty
of San Stefano on the defeated Ottoman
Empire, but the European powers, believing
that this treaty would upset the balance of
power in the Balkans, revised the treaty at
the Congress of Berlin, June 13July 13,
1878. The resulting Treaty of Berlin left
Bosnia and Herzegovina territorially a
part of the Ottoman Empire but allowed
Austria-Hungary to occupy the provinces
for administrative purposes.
Robert B. Kane
See also: Bosnia, Austrian Occupation, 1878;
Bosnian Crisis, 19081909; Berlin, Treaty of,
1878; Obrenovic, Milan (18541901); RussoOttoman War, 18771878; San Stefano,
Treaty of, 1878

Further Reading
Jelavich, Charles, and Barbara Jelavich. The
Establishment of the Balkan National
States, 18041920. Seattle: University of
Washington Press, 1977.
Milojkovic-Djuric, Jelena. The Eastern Question and the Voices of Reason: AustriaHungary, Russia, and the Balkan States,
18751908. Boulder, CO: East European
Monographs; New York: Columbia University Press, 2002.
Pavlowitch, Stevan K. A History of the Balkans, 18041945. London: Longman, 1999.

Bosnian War, 19921995


The Bosnian War took place in Bosnia and
Herzegovina from April 6, 1992, to September 21, 1995. During this time, over 100,000
people were killed and over 1.8 million
more displaced. The war resulted from a
combination of political, social, and religious elements stemming from the disintegration of Communist Yugoslavia, and it

officially ended with the signing of the


Dayton Peace Agreement in Paris.
In April 1992, the former people of
Yugoslavia, including the Bosniaks, Croats,
and Serbians, began fighting for control of
areas in the region of Bosnia-Herzegovina.
In May 1992, the Bosnian Serb army began
their siege and shelling of Sarajevo, the
capital of Bosnia. After internal fighting
between Bosnian Croats and Bosniaks,
these two groups signed a peace agreement,
creating the Federation of Bosnia and
Herzegovina in March 1994.
In July 1995, Serbian troops under
General Ratko Mladic (1942) invaded the
region of Srebrenica in eastern Bosnia. In
what later became known as the Srebrenica
Massacre, the Serbian troops murdered
roughly 7,779 Bosniak males in one week.
Soon afterward, the Bosniak-Croatian alliance began regaining ground against
the Serbian forces. With NATO arbitration,
the war officially ended on December 14,
1995, with the signing of the Dayton Peace
Agreement.
Immediately following the peace agreement, the Office of the High Representative
in Bosnia and Herzegovina was formed by
the United Nations. The office was formed
to oversee the implementation of the aspects
of the peace agreement. In addition, in 1993,
the International Criminal Tribunal for the
former Yugoslavia was formed by the
United Nations to prosecute war crimes in
the former Yugoslavia. Controversial in
nature, the court has convicted numerous
people for crimes in the Bosnian and
Kosovo wars.
In May 2006, Bosnia and Herzegovina
brought a lawsuit against Serbia and Montenegro for inciting ethnic hatred and actively
participating in the Srebrenica Massacre. It
was the first time a nation charged another
nation with genocide. On February 26,

45

46

Bosnian War, 19921995

2007, the International Court of Justice


ruled that Serbian leaders failed to prevent
the massacre, but ultimately exonerated the
country of direct responsibility for genocide.
In doing so, the court prevented further
lawsuits against Serbia for monetary
reparations.

The Bosnian War demonstrates the terrible power of war and the resulting human
rights catastrophes. The sheer number of
killings and displacements demonstrates the
need for further human rights legislation
and enforcement.
Richard C. Hall

Bucharest, Treaty of, 1913


See also: Sarajevo, Siege of, 19921995; Srebrenica Massacre, 1995; Yugoslav Wars,
19911995

Further Reading
Broz, Svetlana, Ellen Elias Bursac, and Laurie
Kain Hart. Good People in an Evil Time:
Portraits of Complicity and Resistance in
the Bosnian War. New York: Other Press,
2004.

Brioni Agreement
The Brioni Agreement ended the 11-day war
between Slovenia and the former Yugoslavia
that began on June 25, 1991. Signed on
July 7, 1991, on the Adriatic island of
Brioni, the agreement called for a cease-fire
and the removal of all Yugoslav Peoples
Army (JNA) forces from Slovenia. It was
negotiated by the European Communitys
(EC) Ministerial Troika (the troika was
comprised of representatives from the
Netherlands, Luxembourg, and Portugal) in
coordination with Croatia, Serbia, Slovenia,
and Yugoslavia.
All parties agreed to the following principles: (1) only the people of Yugoslavia may
determine their future; (2) the situation in
Yugoslavia was a fundamentally new situation, requiring ongoing monitoring and
negotiations; (3) negotiations on the future
of Yugoslavia would begin by August 1,
1991; (4) the Collegiate Presidency must
continue to exercise the full capacity of its
constitutionally derived rights, particularly
those concerning the Federal Armed Forces;
and (5) no party would engage in unilateral
action. Furthermore, the Brioni Agreement
transferred control of Slovenias borders
to the Slovenian police, who were to act
in accordance with Yugoslav federal
guidelines. Customs and air traffic control
remained under Yugoslav control, and all

prisoners taken as a result of related hostilities on June 25, 1991, or later were to be
released.
The Brioni Agreement was significant in
that it guaranteed the continued engagement
of the EC in the Yugoslav situation through
the legal establishment of the European
Community Monitor Mission (ECMM).
Furthermore, although it effectively suspended Slovenias bid for independence for
three months, the Brioni Agreement paved
the way for Slovenias full independence
from Yugoslavia by extending a set of ECissued prerequisites. After the Brioni Agreement was signed, the JNA withdrew its
forces from Slovenia but repositioned them
in Croatia, where violence continued until
1995.
Mary Kate Schneider
See also: JNA (Yugoslav Peoples Army);
Slovene War, 1991.

Further Reading
Lukic, Reneo, and Allen C. Lynch. Europe from
the Balkans to the Urals: The Disintegration
of Yugoslavia and the Soviet Union. Oxford:
Oxford University Press, 1996.
Silber, Laura, and Allan Little. Yugoslavia:
Death of a Nation, New York: TV Books,
1996.
Woodward, Susan L. The Yugoslav Wars.
The Brookings Review 10 (1992): 54.

Bucharest, Treaty of, 1913


The Treaty of Bucharest, signed on
August 10, 1913, between Bulgaria on one
hand and Greece, Montenegro, Romania,
and Serbia on the other, ended the Second
Balkan War. By June 1913, the Balkan
League of 1912 had fractured because of a
dispute between Bulgaria, and Greece and
Serbia over the disposition of territories

47

48

Bucharest, Treaty of, 1918

seized from the Ottomans during the First


Balkan War, especially Macedonia. On the
night of 29-30 June 2930, Bulgarian troops
undertook preemptive attacks on Greek and
Serbian positions in southeastern Macedonia. The Second Balkan War ensued, and
Ottoman and Romanian forces joined in the
attacks on Bulgaria.
With most of its army committed in Macedonia, Bulgaria could not oppose the Ottoman and Romanian invasions. The new
Bulgarian government of Vasil Radoslavov
(18541929) sought a way out of this catastrophe. On July 20, 1913, the Bulgarians began
talks in Nis, Serbia. These continued until
July 24, when they shifted to Bucharest. At
Bucharest, the Bulgarians had to cede
southern Dobrudzha to Romania, southeastern
Macedonia to Greece, and Macedonia west of
the Vardar River watershed to Serbia. The
Montenegrin delegation was present in
Bucharest mainly to support the Serbs. In
doing so, the Montenegrins sought a favorable
division with Serbia of the sanjak of Novi
Pazar. The Treaty of Bucharest left Romania
as the largest and strongest power in the Balkans. It also greatly increased the territories
of Greece and Serbia. For Bulgaria, the Treaty
of Bucharest was a disaster. The Treaty of
Bucharest superseded the ephemeral Treaty
of London. Bulgaria went to war two years
later on the side of the Central Powers largely
to reverse the Bucharest decision.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Balkan War, Second, 1913; Bulgaria
in the Balkan Wars; Constantinople, Treaty of,
1913; Greece in the Balkan Wars; Montenegro
in the Balkan Wars; Romania in the Balkan
Wars; Serbia in the Balkan Wars

Further Reading
Hall, Richard C. The Balkan Wars, 1912
1913: Prelude to the First World War.
London: Routledge, 2000.

Helmreich, E. C. The Diplomacy of the Balkan


Wars, 19121913. Cambridge, MA:
Harvard University Press, 1938.
Rossos, Andrew. Russia and the Balkans:
Inter-Balkan Rivalries and Russian Foreign
Policy 19081914. Toronto: University of
Toronto Press, 1981.

Bucharest, Treaty of, 1918


The Treaty of Bucharest temporarily ended
Romanian participation in World War I.
Romania entered the war in August 1916,
after the success of the Russian Brusilov
offensives weakened the Austro-Hungarian
army. France and Russia guaranteed Romania territorial compensation in Transylvania,
Bukovina, and the Banat.
In response to Romanian entry, former
German chief of staff General Erich von
Falkenhayn (18611922) organized a combined German, Austrian, and Bulgarian
force that struck Romania on three fronts
and seized the capital of Bucharest on
December 5. The loss of 310,000 men in
four months impelled Romania to sign the
Armistice of Foc sani in December 1916.
Hostilities resumed the following year, and
Austrian and German armies defeated most
of the remaining Romanian units in a
summer offensive. In March 1918, Romania
agreed to a second armistice.
The Treaty of Bucharest was signed in the
Romanian capital on May 7, 1918, just three
months after Russia signed the Treaty of
Brest Litovsk. As with that treaty, the Treaty
of Bucharest imposed ruthless terms on the
loser. It stipulated that Romania cede passes
in the Carpathian Mountains to AustriaHungary, leaving Romanias northern border practically indefensible. Romania also
had to cede the Dobrudja (Dobrudzha)
region on the Black Sea to Bulgaria, leaving
eastern Romania open to invasion from the

Bukovina

sea. The northern half of Dobrudja, north of


the city of Constanta, was to be ruled as a
German-Austria-Bulgarian mandate, while
Bulgaria annexed outright the southern
half. (Bulgaria had lost southern Dobrudja
to Romania through the 1913 Treaty of
Bucharest that concluded the Second Balkan
War.) Strategically, the loss of the northern
half hurt Romania more, as it meant the
loss of all three mouths of the Danube
River. In compensation, the treaty authorized Romania to annex Bessarabia, which
had become a Soviet republic in December 1917, then an independent republic in
March 1918.
The Treaty of Bucharest also imposed
harsh economic terms. Germany received a
90-year lease on Romanian oil fields and
nearly unlimited rights to export Romanian
grain and raw materials. In the span of
18 months, the Germans seized 1 million
tons of oil and 2 million tons of grain.
These resources helped make possible the
Ludendorff offensives and sustained the
German war economy.
The one-sided terms of the treaties of
Bucharest and Brest Litovsk eroded any lingering Allied sentiment for a lenient peace
toward the Central Powers. But even these
terms were not enough for the German military. Generals Erich Ludendorff (1865
1937) and Paul von Hindenburg (1847
1934) demanded outright annexation of
Romania. German diplomat Richard von
Kuhlmann (18731948) objected, believing
that it was important to respect the ambitions of Germanys allies. Furthermore, Germany had promised southern Dobrudja to
Bulgaria early in the war, and Kuhlmann
argued that it was important to honor that
pledge. Ludendorff and Hindenburg had
already lost a similar battle with Kuhlmann
over annexing Lithuania. The generals
began a media campaign, supported by

German industrialists, to discredit Kuhlmann, but the campaign was unsuccessful.


An intimidated Romanian parliament
signed the Treaty of Bucharest, but King
Ferdinand I (of the Hohenzollern dynasty)
delayed affixing his signature to it. The
change in Germanys military fortunes in
the summer of 1918 made it easier for
Romania to postpone ratification, and it
never actually completed the process. In
October, Romania officially renounced the
treaty and reentered the war.
Despite its poor performance in the war,
Romania benefited greatly from the Allied
victory. The subsequent Treaty of Trianon
with Hungary and the Treaty of Neuilly
with Bulgaria not only reversed the Treaty
of Bucharest, but brought Romania significant territorial gains.
Michael S. Neiberg
See also: Bessarabia; Dobrudja; Romania in
World War I

Further Reading
Hitchins, Keith. Rumania, 18661947.
Oxford: Clarendon, 1994.
Kitchen, Martin, Hindenburg, Ludendorff,
and Rumania. Slavonic and East European
Review 54 (1976): 21430.
Torrey, Glenn E. Romania and World War I:
A Collection of Studies. Portland, OR:
Center for Romanian Studies, 1998.

Bukovina
Bukovina is a historical region in Central
Europe that has been divided between Romania and Ukraine since 1944. From the 500s
until the mid-1300s, the region was part of
several successive states until it became the
nucleus of the Principality of Moldavia. The
Treaty of Ku c u k Kaynarca, ending the
Russo-Ottoman War of 17681774, awarded

49

50

Bulgaria in the Balkan Wars

Bukovina to the Hapsburgs, who annexed the


province in January 1775 and first officially
used the name Bukovina. During the
1800s, the province experienced several
administrative arrangements until it became
a separate province in February 1861, a status
that lasted until October 1918. By 1900,
Ukrainians composed the majority in the
northern part of the province, and Romanians
in the southern half. The province also had
substantial German and Jewish minorities
and small numbers of Poles, Hungarians,
Slovaks, and Slovenes.
During World War I, the AustroHungarian and German armies fought several battles in Bukovina against the Russians
and drove them out in 1917. With the collapse of Austria-Hungary in October 1918,
both the Romanian National Council and
the Ukrainian National Council claimed the
region. In late 1918, Romanian troops
occupied Bukovina, despite Ukrainian
protests, and the 1919 Treaty of Saint
Germain awarded the province to Romania.
During the interwar years, the Romanian
government attempted to Romanize the
Ukrainians but relented somewhat in the
1930s to improve relations with the Soviet
Union.
On June 26, 1940, the Soviet Union
demanded that Romania cede to it northern
Bukovina and, two days later, occupied this
region, which it then incorporated into the
Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic (SSR).
Following the 1940 Soviet occupation,
about 250,000 Romanians fled northern
Bukovina to Romania, and the Soviet secret
police, the NKVD, killed or deported to
Siberia most of those who did not. In
19401941, about 170,000 Germans were
resettled to German-occupied western
Poland (Warthegau).
In late June 1941, the Romanian army
reoccupied northern Bukovina. Between

June 1941 and August 1944, Romanian and


German authorities murdered or caused the
death of about 60,000 Bukovinian Jews,
approximately 50 percent of the prewar
Jewish population. The Soviet army returned
in late August 1944. The 1947 Paris Peace
Treaty formally awarded northern Bukovina
to the Soviet Union, which again became a
part of the Ukrainian SSR (Ukraine after
1991), and southern Bukovina to Romania,
confirming the permanent division of the
historical region.
Robert B. Kane
See also: Bessarabia; Romania in World
War II

Further Reading
DeLuca, Anthony R., and Paul D. Quinlan.
Romania, Culture, and Nationalism: A
Tribute to Radu Florescu. Boulder, CO:
East European Monographs, 1998.
Dima, Nicholas. From Moldavia to Moldova:
The Soviet-Romanian Territorial Dispute.
Boulder, CO: East European Monographs,
1991.
Georgescu, Vlad, and Matei Calinescu. The
Romanians: A History. Columbus: Ohio
State University Press, 1991.
Gold, Hugo, ed. History of the Jews in Bukovina. Tel Aviv: Olamenyu, 19581962.
Originally published in German. English
translation on the Internet.

Bulgaria in the Balkan Wars


For the Bulgarian state established after the
Russo-Ottoman War of 18771878, the Balkan Wars represented an opportunity to rectify the settlement of the Congress of
Berlin. Bulgarian nationalists had been
overjoyed by the Treaty of San Stefano of
March 1878, which established a large Bulgarian state in southeastern Europe. The
Austro-Hungarians and the British objected

Bulgaria in the Balkan Wars

to this big Bulgaria because they feared it


would result in Russian domination of the
entire region.
The Congress of Berlin trisected San
Stefano Bulgaria. A Principality of Bulgaria
under the nominal suzerainty of the Ottoman
sultan ruled the region between the Danube
River and the Balkan Mountains with its
capital at Sofia. The autonomous Ottoman
province of Eastern Rumelia, south of the
Balkan Mountains, had a Christian governor
in Plovdiv. Macedonia returned to full
Ottoman rule. After the Congress of Berlin,
every Bulgarian government strove to overturn the Berlin settlement and reestablish
San Stefano Bulgaria. The Young Turk seizure of power in 1908 in Constantinople
raised concerns in Sofia that reforms might
strengthen the Ottoman Empire and prevent
the realization of a San Stefano Bulgaria.
Then the Italo-Turkish War in 1911 offered
the opportunity to realize Bulgarian nationalist objectives while the Ottomans were
distracted and weakened by the war with
Italy. The government of Ivan E. Geshov
(18491924) decided that the time was
right to realize Bulgarian nationalist objectives in the Balkans.
With Russian approval and assistance the
Bulgarians began talks with Serbia in the
autumn of 1911. After some difficult negations they reached an agreement which they
signed on March 13, 1912. The open section
of this treaty provided for mutual military
assistance. The secret part divided Macedonia into two parts, one indisputably Bulgarian, the other, the so-called contested
zone, left to the arbitration of the Russian
czar. This marked the first time since the
Congress of Berlin that the Bulgarian
government had conceded the possibility
that it would not obtain all of Macedonia.
Nevertheless, most Bulgarian political
and military officials expected to gain all

Macedonia in any future Balkan settlement.


Having accomplished the alliance with
Serbia, the Sofia government turned to
Athens. On May 30, 1912, a BulgarianGreek alliance was signed. This did not contain any territorial provisions, primarily
because the Bulgarians were confident that
their army would occupy any disputed areas
in southern Macedonia and western Thrace
before the Greeks could arrive. At the end of
August 1912, the Bulgarians came to an
agreement with the Montenegrins.
In conjunction with its Greek and Serbian
allies, Bulgaria declared war on the Ottoman
Empire on October 17, 1912. The initial
phase of this First Balkan War exceeded all
Bulgarian expectations. The Geshov
government initially had intended to seek
Russian intervention to end the war after a
short time of fighting. The successes of
Bulgarian arms at Lozengrad and Lyule
BurgasBuni Hisar, however, caused the
titular commander in chief of the army,
Czar Ferdinand (18611948), and his
deputy commander in chief, General Mihail
Savov (18571928), as well as many in the
government to conclude that total victory
over the Ottomans was possible. The Bulgarians pursued the retreating Ottomans to
the Chataldzha lines. Czar Ferdinand hoped
to make a triumphal entry into Constantinople. The defeat at Chataldzha, however,
made the Bulgarian army command realize
that their forces were exhausted and overextended. With some sense of relief, they concluded an armistice with the Ottomans on
December 3, 1912. Peace negotiations
between the Balkan allies and the Ottomans
began in London on December 16.
The London Peace talks did not last long.
The Bulgarians insisted on obtaining
Adrianople, which they had besieged since
October. They also hoped to establish a
presence on the Sea of Marmara. After the

51

52

Bulgaria in the Balkan Wars

Young Turks seized power in Constantinople on January 23, 1913, they denounced
the armistice. The war recommenced on
February 3.
With the help of the Serbian Second
Army, the Bulgarians captured Adrianople
on March 26, 1913. This represented the
final Bulgarian triumph of the Balkan Wars.
At this point the Bulgarians anticipated a
national state even larger than that established at San Stefano. Even as Bulgarian
troops entered Adrianople, however, Bulgarias relationship with the Balkan allies was
eroding. During the initial phase of the war,
Serbian troops had occupied most of Macedonia while the bulk of the Bulgarian
army fought in Thrace. When the AustroHungarian government indicated that it
would not tolerate a Serbian presence on
the Adriatic Sea in northern Albania, the
Serbs sought compensation in Macedonia.
Meanwhile, the lack of a clear territorial
agreement with Greece led to clashes
between Bulgarian and Greek troops in
southeastern Macedonia around Nigrita.
Possession of Salonika became a focus of
Bulgarian and Greek hostility. Also, the
Romanians raised the issue of compensation for Bulgarian Balkan War gains. The
Romanians demanded southern Dobrudja
(Dobrudzha), including the Danubean port
of Silistra.
The Sofia government made little effort to
deal with these issues, preferring instead to
rely on the support of Russia. This proved
to be a mistake. In April 1913, the St. Petersburg Ambassadors conference awarded Silistra to Romania. This alienated both the
Bulgarians, because of the loss of a Bulgarian city, and the Romanians, because they
wanted all of southern Dobrudja. Hostilities
between Bulgarian and Greek troops escalated in southern Macedonia. The Serbs
began to establish permanent administrative

and cultural institutions throughout


Macedonia. In despair, Geshov resigned.
The ardently pro-Russian Stoyan Danev
(18581949) replaced him. Finally the
Russians somewhat reluctantly agreed to
take up their arbitration responsibilities.
Up until this time, most Bulgarians had
supported the war effort. A notable exception was the leader of the Bulgarian Agrarian Union, Aleksandur Stamboliski (1879
1923). By the spring of 1913, however,
many of the peasant soldiers in the Bulgarian army were becoming impatient. Unrest
emerged in the ranks. The army command
sought to use the soldiers or to disperse
them before the unrest spread throughout
the army.
Before Bulgarian prime minister Stoyan
Danev could begin his journey to St. Petersburg for the arbitration process, Bulgarian
troops acting on the orders of Czar Ferdinand and Deputy Commander in Chief
Savov attacked Greek and Serbian positions
in eastern Macedonia on the night of
June 2930, 1913. The Greeks and Serbs
immediately launched counterattacks. In
this situation, Danev resigned on July 13.
The Russians then lost interest in pursuing
the arbitration process. In the absence of
any Russian help, the pro-Austrian Vasil
Radoslavov then assumed the responsibility
of prime minister. The Bulgarians found
themselves in a precarious situation. Greek
forces soon wiped out the Bulgarian contingent isolated in Salonika. Meanwhile, the
Bulgarian Second Army, wedged between
the Greeks and the Serbs in the southeastern
corner of Macedonia, suffered a major
defeat as it retreated northward. To the
north, the Serbs inflicted a defeat on the
Bulgarian Third Army at Bregalinitisa.
By mid-July, however, as the Bulgarians
assumed positions along their prewar frontier, they were able to halt the Greek and

Bulgaria in World War I

Serbian advance. At Kilimantsi, the Bulgarians achieved a major defensive victory


over the Serbs. This was ultimately to no
avail. The Ottoman army, set on retaking
Adrianople, crossed the frontier on July 12
and quickly reoccupied that city. Then on
July 14, the Romanian army, determined to
obtain southern Dobrudja, crossed the Danube in three places and advanced into central
Bulgaria. With all of their forces engaged in
fighting the Greeks and Serbs, the Bulgarians could not oppose these two invasions.
The Ottoman advance into Bulgarian
territory was particularly upsetting to the
Bulgarians, because it revived memories of
the 500 years of Ottoman domination of
Bulgaria. With enemies all around, and
with no help forthcoming from Russia or
any other great power, the Sofia government
asked for an armistice. Even as the Sofia
government agreed to talks, the Bulgarian
army succeeded in trapping the oncoming
Greek army in Kresna gorge. This was too
late to affect the outcome of the war.
Peace talks ensued in two separate venues. In Bucharest, the Bulgarians met with
Greek, Romanian, and Serbian representatives. They conceded the loss of most of
Macedonia and southern Dobrudja in the
Treaty of Bucharest, signed on August 19,
1913. In Constantinople, the Bulgarians
met with the sultans government. There
the Bulgarians accepted the loss of most of
eastern Thrace, eliminating the gains of
1912. They signed the Treaty of Constantinople on September 30, 1912.
The Balkan Wars were a catastrophe for
Bulgaria. In the two wars, the Bulgarians
lost 32,000 dead, 110,000 wounded, and
34,000 dead of disease. In addition, large
numbers of Bulgarian civilians died of cholera and typhus epidemics. Over 100,000 refugees flooded into Bulgaria from Greek- and
Serbian-occupied parts of Macedonia.

Bulgaria had no friends among its neighbors


and lost Russian patronage. The country did
make some territorial gains. Western Thrace
and the Rhodope region became a part of the
country, adding about 10,000 square miles,
including the Aegean port of Dedeagach,
and 130,000 people to the country. The
Balkan Wars, begun in triumph, ended in
disaster for Bulgaria. In an effort to overcome the Balkan War defeat and obtain
Macedonia, Bulgaria intervened in World
Wars I and II on the German side. Neither
effort succeeded.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Adrianople, Siege of, 19121913;
Balkan War, First, 19121913; Balkan War,
Second, 1913; Balkan Wars, 19121913,
Causes; Balkan Wars, 19121913, Consequences; Bucharest, Treaty of, 1913; Chataldzha, Battle of, 1912; Constantinople,
Treaty of, 1913; Dimitriev, Radko (1859
1918); Ferdinand I, Czar of Bulgaria (1861
1948); Kalimantsi, Battle of, 1913; London,
Treaty of, 1913; Lyule BurgasBuni Hisar,
Battle of, 1912; Savov, Mihail (18571928)

Further Reading
Crampton, R. J. Bulgaria, 18781918.
Boulder, CO: East European Monographs,
1983.
Hall, Richard C. Bulgarias Road to the First
World War. Boulder, CO: East European
Monographs, 1996.
Helmreich, E. C. The Diplomacy of the Balkan
Wars, 19121913. Cambridge, MA:
Harvard University Press, 1938.

Bulgaria in World War I


Bulgaria was the smallest of the four Central
Powers in terms of population, economy,
and military forces. However, Bulgaria
made important contributions to the Central
alliance. When World War I began in

53

54

Bulgaria in World War I

Bulgarian Army unit holding a thanksgiving mass just after an armistice went into effect,
ending Bulgarian participation in World War I, September 29, 1918. (Francis A. March,
History of the World War, 1918)

August 1914, the Bulgarian government, led


by Prime Minister Vasil Radoslavov (1854
1929), proclaimed neutrality. The country
was exhausted from the strenuous efforts of
the First Balkan War in 19121913 and the
catastrophic defeat of the Second Balkan
War in the summer of 1913. Nevertheless,
many Bulgarians demonstrated traditional
pro-Russian sentiments. The popular Balkan
War hero Radko Dimitriev (18591918)
resigned his post as Bulgarian minister in
St. Petersburg and accepted a commission
in the Russian army. Others also volunteered
for service with the Russians. Czar Ferdinand (18611948) and Prime Minister
Radoslavov, however, inclined toward the
Central Powers.
Almost all Bulgarians perceived in World
War I an opportunity to reverse the disastrous Treaty of Bucharest of 1913, which
had ended the Second Balkan War and
deprived Bulgaria of its national goals in
Macedonia. When the Ottoman Empire
entered the war in October 1914, both

warring alliances recognized the strategic


importance of Bulgaria and sought its inclusion on their respective sides. The price of
Bulgarias participation on either side was
Macedonia. Because Serbia had secured
most of Macedonia as a result of the Balkan
Wars, the Central Powers held a distinct
advantage. They could promise Bulgaria
the immediate acquisition of Macedonia.
The best the Entente could offer, however,
was eastern Thrace, then in Ottoman hands,
and a portion of Macedonia at the end of
the war provided that Serbia received compensation in Austria-Hungary. Serbian
reluctance to surrender any of Macedonia
stymied Entente efforts to attract Bulgaria.
The Bulgarians negotiated with both sides
until the summer of 1915.
Entente defeats in Galicia and Gallipoli
persuaded Czar Ferdinand and Radoslavov
that the time was propitious for Bulgaria
to join the Central Powers and obtain
Macedonia. On September 6, 1915, at
German military headquarters in Pless, the

Bulgaria in World War I

Bulgarian representatives signed an alliance


with Germany and Austria-Hungary that
provided for a German-Austrian-Bulgarian
attack on Serbia. Concurrent negotiations
with the Ottoman Empire obtained for Bulgaria the cession of the lower Maritsa River
valley in eastern Thrace. This territory provided access to Bulgarias Aegean port at
Dedeagach.
On October 14, 1915, Bulgaria, in accordance with the Pless agreement, declared
war on Serbia. Two days later, the Bulgarian
First and Second Armies joined the ongoing
Austro-Hungarian and German invasion of
that country. This invasion soon overwhelmed the Serbs, who had to retreat
across the Albanian mountains to the Adriatic Sea in the face of overwhelming force.
Macedonia, the Bulgarian irredentist goal
since the Treaty of Berlin, quickly came
under Bulgarian rule. Bulgarian forces
repulsed a British and French attempt
launched from Salonika to assist the Serbs.
Despite strong Bulgarian objections, the
German high command refused to sanction
the Bulgarian army to cross the Greek frontier in pursuit of the defeated British and
French troops. At this point the Germans
did not want to involve Greece in the war.
The Germans also thought that the containment of Entente soldiers around Salonika
was preferable to their utilization on the
Western Front. This failure to destroy the
British and French allowed the Entente
forces to regroup and augment their forces
around Salonika with Italian, Russian, and
Serbian troops, where they posed a threat to
the Central Powers southeastern flank for
the remainder of the war.
In 1916, the Germans withdrew their
objections to a Bulgarian advance into
Greece. Some German troops even arrived
to participate. Greek forces surrendered
Fort Rupel on the Struma River northeast

of Salonika without fighting on May 26,


1916. Later that summer, Bulgarian troops
occupied portions of northern Greece,
including Seres on August 19 and Drama
and the port of Kavala on September 12.
The Bulgarians also assumed occupation
duties in Serbia to free German soldiers for
the Western Front.
In August 1916, following the Romanian
declaration of war against Austria-Hungary,
Bulgaria joined the other Central Powers in
an attack on Romania. Bulgarian troops
advanced into the Dobrudzha against Romanian and Russian opposition, seizing the
Black Sea port of Constanta in October.
Together with German and Turkish units, Bulgarian forces also crossed the Danube and
overran Wallachia. These attacks effectively
knocked Romania out of the war and restored
southern Dobrudzha, taken by Romania
during the Second Balkan War, to Bulgaria.
With the reoccupation of southern
Dobrudzha, Bulgaria had accomplished its
major war aim. Bulgarian policy now
became largely defensive. Bulgarian administrative authorities, however, did little to
endear themselves to the populations in the
new territories. The Bulgarian regime there
was often harsh, corrupt, and inefficient.
In the autumn of 1916, an Entente offensive launched from the Salonika positions
succeeded in taking a portion of southwestern Macedonia, including the city of
Bitola (Monastir). An attempt to advance
farther into Macedonia, however, met strong
Bulgarian resistance and failed to break
through the Bulgarian positions.
By 1918, the Bulgarian situation had
begun to deteriorate. The country had still
not recovered to any great degree from the
human and material loses of the Balkan
Wars. Accompanying this was the growth
of discord between Bulgaria and Germany.
Much of the food and raw materials

55

56

Bulgaria in World War I

produced in Bulgaria left the country,


legally and illegally going to Germany to
sustain the German war effort. Bulgarians
also began to dislike their allies because of
German control of Bulgarian transportation
and communication facilities. In addition,
differences with Austria-Hungary and
Germany arose over the disposition of
northern (Romanian) Dobrudzha. All these
issues contributed to Bulgarias disaffection
with the war. The Treaty of Bucharest,
signed in May 1918 between the Central
Powers and Romania, granted all of the
Dobrudzha to Bulgaria but gave Germany
control of much of the transportation infrastructure of the territory as well as considerable economic concessions throughout
southeastern Europe. This satisfied no
one. Conflict also developed between the
Bulgarians and the Ottomans. The Ottomans
demanded the return of the territories they
had ceded to Bulgaria at the beginning of
the war. Finally, having been at war off and
on since 1912, the Bulgarian population
began to suffer from profound warweariness. On June 20, 1918, Prime Minister Radoslavov resigned, ostensibly over his
failure to obtain a clear title to all of
Dobrudzha in the Treaty of Bucharest.
A government more conciliatory to a negotiated settlement with the Entente, led by
Aleksandur Malinov, replaced him.
An Entente offensive in September 1918
quickly overwhelmed Bulgarian forces at
Dobro Pole and broke through Bulgarian
lines into Macedonia. Although some units
continued to resist fiercely, much of the
Bulgarian military effort collapsed. By September 25, British and French troops had
crossed into Bulgaria proper. The same day,
the Bulgarian czar and government decided
to seek an armistice. On September 29, the
Bulgarians signed the armistice at Salonika.
According to its terms, the Bulgarians were

required to demobilize their army and turn


all their equipment over to Entente forces.
Furthermore, Bulgarian troops had to
evacuate all occupied Greek and Serbian
territories, including Macedonia. Finally,
Bulgarian communication and transportation systems were made available for
Entente operations.
Meanwhile, many of the disaffected soldiers streaming back toward Sofia accepted
the loose leadership of the Bulgarian
Agrarian Union, the peasant-based political
party that had opposed the war from its
onset. These soldiers, together with some
Agrarian Union peasants, sought to
inflict retribution on those responsible for
Bulgarias catastrophe. The disorganized
rebels proclaimed a republic in Radomir, a
small town southwest of the capital. Ragtag
formations of soldiers and peasants reached
the outskirts of Sofia, where on September 30, a hastily collected force, including
military cadets and German troops, defeated
and dispersed them. With the signing of the
armistice and the abdication of Czar Ferdinand on October 4, the major goals of the
soldiers were accomplished. The war was
over, and the main culprit responsible for it
in their view, Czar Ferdinand, had fled to
Germany. Ferdinands elder son succeeded
him as Czar Boris III (18941943).
The Bulgarians were the last to join the
Central Powers and the first to leave. Within
a month of the Bulgarian armistice, the
Ottoman and Habsburg Empires likewise
gave up the fight. The Germans realized
that with the defeat of Bulgaria, the war
was lost. On October 3, 1918, the chief of
the German General Staff, General Paul
von Hindenburg (18471934), recognized
that because of the collapse of the Macedonian Front, there was no longer a prospect
of forcing peace on the enemy. Forty-eight
hours later, the Germans contacted U.S.

Bulgaria in World War II

president Woodrow Wilson (18561924),


seeking his mediation to end the war.
World War I devastated Bulgaria demographically, materially, and psychologically.
The army lost 101,224 dead and 144,026
wounded. In addition, some 60,000 refugees
flooded the country from Dobrudja, Macedonia, and Thrace. The Treaty of Neuilly
imposed reparation payments of 1.5 million
gold francs to the Entente powers as well as
the transfer of specified quantities of livestock and railroad equipment to Greece,
Romania, and Yugoslavia. Bulgaria also
had to deliver 50,000 tons of coal annually
to Yugoslavia. The war shattered the dream
of a greater Bulgaria that would include
Dobrudja, Macedonia, and Thrace. This
was the third time in 41 years that Bulgaria
had failed to achieve a unified state. The
fourth failure of national unification, World
War II, would effectively end that dream.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Dobro Pole, Battle of, 1918;
Ferdinand I, Czar of Bulgaria (18611948);
Macedonian Front, 19151918; Neuilly,
Treaty of, 1920; Zhekov, Nikola (18641949)

Further Reading
Crampton, R. J. Bulgaria, 18781918. New
York: East European Monographs, 1983.
Hall, Richard C. Balkan Breakthrough: The
Battle of Dobro Pole 1918. Bloomington:
Indiana University Press, 2010.
Vlahov, Tushe. Otnosheniya mezhdu Bulgariya i tsentralinite sili prez voinite 1912
1918 g. Sofia: Bulgarskata komunisticheska
partiya, 1957.

Bulgaria in World War II


In 1940, Bulgaria had a population of
6,341,000 people. It was ruled by both a
czar and a popularly elected parliament.
Czar Boris III (18941943) dominated the

nations foreign policy and was largely


responsible for the nations neutrality on
the outbreak of World War II in September 1939. Boris hoped that peace might be
quickly achieved in Europe, and he also
took note of the fact that although the
Bulgarian people were largely pro-Soviet,
the officers of the army were pro-German.
The weakness of Boriss policy, however,
was the popular desire to attain additional
territory in the Balkans. In World War I,
Bulgaria had joined the Central Powers in an
attempt to recoup territorial losses from the
Second Balkan War. The countrys defeat in
that conflict led to a peace settlement that
had further reduced Bulgarian territory. By
1940, the nation remained the only former
Central Power that had not regained some of
the land lost through the World War I peace
treaties. Popular sentiment to redress this situation was high. Germany partially fulfilled
these territorial ambitions on September 7,
1940, through the Treaty of Craiova, which
granted the area of the southern Dobrudja
region to Bulgaria.
German interest in Bulgaria was the product of the increased strategic importance of
the country. By late 1940, German plans
for the invasion of Greece and those for the
conquest of the Soviet Union rendered
Bulgaria much more significant to the Axis
cause. On March 1, 1941, Sofia entered
into an agreement whereby Bulgaria joined
the Tripartite Powers and allowed German
troops to move through Bulgarian territory.
Unlike governments in other regions of
eastern Europe, however, the government
of Bulgaria remained autonomous.
Sofia stayed noncommitted militarily
until December 13, when it declared war
on the United States and Great Britain; the
country never declared war on the Soviet
Union. Bulgarias military participation in
World War II was limited to the Balkans and

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Bulgarian Fatherland War, 19441945

centered on the acquisition of territory. Bulgarian troops did not take an active part in
Germanys invasion and conquest of Yugoslavia or Greece, but the army did occupy
both the Yugoslav and Greek portions of
Macedonia and most of western Thrace.
Beyond these actions, Bulgaria contributed little to the Axis cause and often
opposed German requests in both the military and civilian sectors. Military operations
were confined to garrison duties in Macedonia and Thrace, despite Berlins attempts to
persuade Sofia to commit troops against the
Soviet Union. Boris and his government
also compromised little on the issue of the
Jews, who formed about 1 percent of the
nations population. By the end of the war,
most of Bulgarias Jews had escaped extermination, although the government had confined them to labor camps to appease Berlin.
Boriss opposition to German authority
increased after the defeat of Italy, which
led him to seek a withdrawal from the war.
Bulgarian fortunes declined after
August 28, 1943, with the death of Czar
Boris III. His successor, Simeon II, was a
child, and the regency that governed in his
stead was less effective than Boris had
been. Political unrest was compounded by
popular instability due to declining Axis fortunes and a weakening of the Bulgarian
home front. On November 19, 1943, Sofia
experienced its first heavy attack by Allied
bombers, and by late 1943, food and consumer goods were in short supply.
Support for a coalition known as the
Fatherland Front and composed partially of
Communists subsequently began to rise, as
the Soviet Red Army marched toward Bulgarias northern border in the spring of
1944. Efforts by Sofia to secure a peace settlement with the Americans or the British
failed. Amid mounting Soviet pressure for
a Bulgarian declaration of war against

Germany, a new government acceded to


Soviet demands on September 8 after
Moscow had declared war on Bulgaria three
days earlier. Red Army troops subsequently
occupied the country and appointed members
of the Fatherland Front to the government.
The new government, eager to please
Moscow, committed 450,000 Bulgarian
troops to the Red Army for operations
in Yugoslavia and Hungary, at a cost of
32,000 killed and wounded. As operations
unfolded, Communist officials in Bulgaria
began the process of firmly fixing the country in the Soviet sphere of influence.
Eric W. Osborne
See also: Boris III, Czar of Bulgaria (1894
1943); Bulgaria in World War I; Bulgarian
Fatherland War, 19441945

Further Reading
Groueff, Stephan. Crown of Thorns: The Reign
of King Boris III of Bulgaria, 19181943.
Lanham, MD: Madison Books, 1987.
Miller, Marshall L. Bulgaria during the Second World War. Stanford, CA: Stanford
University Press, 1975.

Bulgarian Fatherland War,


19441945
The Fatherland War was the name bestowed
by the Communist regime on the Bulgarian
military effort during World War II in the
fall of 1944 and the winter and spring of
1945 fighting alongside the Soviet Union.
Communist historiography often ignored the
earlier Bulgarian military participation in the
war alongside Nazi Germany. During the
German alliance, Bulgarian forces assumed
occupation duties in Greece and Yugoslavia.
Although they met some guerilla resistance,
they largely avoided extensive combat.
The Communist-dominated Fatherland Front seized power in Bulgaria on

Bulgarian Horrors, 1876

September 9, 1944. The next day, Bulgaria


declared war on Germany. Few German
units remained in the country then, but Bulgarian occupation forces fought against their
former allies as the Germans began to withdraw from the Balkans. General Ivan Marinov
(18961979) then assumed command of the
Bulgarian army. The Bulgarians then came
under the rule of Soviet marshal Fedor I.
Tolbukhins (18941949) Third Ukrainian
Front. They fought alongside Soviet units
through eastern Yugoslavia and southern
Hungary until the end of the war, advancing
into central Europe as far as Budapest and
Vienna. During this time, the Bulgarians sustained heavy losses in combat against German
and Hungarian forces. These amounted to
around 32,000 dead, much greater than the
losses incurred in occupation duties in Greece
and Yugoslavia while Bulgaria fought on
the side of the Germans.
The participation of the bulk of the Bulgarian army in this campaign had two distinct advantages for the new Communistled government in Sofia. With the army
was outside of the country, the Communists
extended their control throughout Bulgaria.
The highly nationalist Bulgarian officer
corps was not present to oppose the implementation of Communist rule. Also, the
high casualties incurred in the campaign
served to weaken the traditionally antiCommunist military. The new Communistleaning government in Sofia replaced the
losses among junior officers and NCO with
loyal Communist cadres, who often had
served in the Bulgarian Partisan movement.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Bulgaria in World War II; Partisans,
Bulgaria

Further Reading
Crampton, R. J. Bulgaria. Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 2007.

Dimitrov, D. Uchastieto na Bulgariya vuv voinata sreshtu hitleriska Germaniya v razvurshvashtiya etap na vtorata svetnova voina
(Noemvri 1944yuli 1945), Istoricheski
Pregled (Sofia), 51/4 (1995): 2738.
Miller, Marshall L. Bulgaria during the Second World War. Stanford, CA: Stanford
University Press, 1975.

Bulgarian Horrors, 1876


Bulgarians were the last people in the
Balkans to achieve their independence from
the Ottoman Empire, and that independence
came with the price of the Bulgarian Horrors
of 1876. Casualty estimates vary, but tens of
thousands of Bulgarians were killed by
Turks following a demonstration on May 2,
1876, in which rebels issued a declaration
stating, From today on, we make known in
the name of the Bulgarian people before all
the world that we demand: Freedom or
death to the people!
Throughout the mid-nineteenth century,
people in Bulgaria began quietly protesting
against Greek dominance in their churches
and Turkish dominance in their government.
Instead of making a strong bid for their own
freedom, however, they supported other
Balkan people as they rose in revolt against
the Turks. By the 1830s, some Bulgarians
felt strong enough to act on their own behalf,
and small, unorganized guerrilla activity
started taking place in the mountains.
As the independence movement in
Bulgaria grew, it divided into two factions:
reformers who wanted to improve their
status within the Ottoman Empire, and
revolutionaries who demanded complete
independence. The latter group led revolts
throughout the Balkans during the 1830s
and 1840s, and by the 1860s, their activities
had intensified, with young revolutionaries
inciting riots at community meetings

59

60

Bulgarian-Serb War, 1885

in small Bulgarian villages. A young


revolutionary named George Benkovski
(18431876) planned such a meeting on
May 2, 1876, in the town of Panagyurishte
in central Bulgaria. The proclamation of
Freedom or death to the people! stirred
up the townspeople, and a young school
teacher sewed a flag with the motto Liberty
or Death. The Bulgarians assembled in the
square, listened to Benkovskis inflammatory speeches, and then scattered to kill
Turks wherever they might find them.
Mistakes on the side of the rebels resulted
in the organization of more than 5,000 Turkish soldiers, and they began overwhelming
villages where the rebels were hiding.
Towns and villages fell, and by the time the
looting, burning, and killing was finished,
thousands of Bulgarians lay dead. Turks
estimated the deaths at a mere 3,000, but a
British consular agent set the number at
12,000. An American investigator later
claimed 15,000 Bulgarians were killed,
while Bulgarian historians now put the number somewhere between 30,000 and 60,000.
Nonetheless, Russia and the other European
powers were enraged at the events in the
Balkans, which came to be known as the
Bulgarian Horrors. These feelings eventually resulted in European intervention, the
Russo-Ottoman War of 18771878, and the
liberation of Bulgaria in 1878.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Berlin, Treaty of, 1878; RussoOttoman War, 18771878; San Stefano,
Treaty of, 1878

Further Reading
Crampton, R. J. Bulgaria. Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 2007.
Perry, Duncan M. Stefan Stambolov and the Emergence of Modern Bulgaria, 18701895. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 1993.

Walker, Dale L. Januarius MacGahan: The


Life and Campaigns of an American War
Correspondent. Athens: Ohio University
Press, 1988.

Bulgarian-Serb War, 1885


The Bulgarian-Serb War was fought from
November 14, 1885, to March 3, 1886.
After the Russo-Ottoman War of 1877
1878, Russia imposed the Treaty of San
Stefano on the Ottoman Empire in
March 1878. The treaty granted independence
to Romania, Serbia, and Montenegro and
established an autonomous greater Principality of Bulgaria. The European powers,
believing that the treaty would upset the balance of power in the Balkans, met in Berlin
from June 13 to July 13, 1878, and modified
its provisions. The resulting Treaty of Berlin,
among other things, reduced the size of
Bulgaria by allowing the Ottoman Empire to
retain Eastern Rumelia. Alexander of
Battenberg (18571893), nephew of Czar
Alexander II (18181881), became the ruler
of the reduced Bulgaria.
On September 18, 1885, Bulgarian
nationalists in Eastern Rumelia staged
a bloodless coup and declared its unification
with Bulgaria. The Ottoman Empire
approved the coup, but Czar Alexander III
(18451894) disapproved of this action and
withdrew all Russian officers and advisers
from Bulgaria, leaving the Bulgarian army
without officers above the rank of captain.
Serbia opposed this territorial increase
of Bulgaria. The Serbian king, Milan Obrenovic (18541901), who was having domestic problems, demanded that Bulgaria cede
some of its territory to Serbia. The European
powers attempted to discourage him, but
Milan declared war on Bulgaria on November 13, 1885.

Bulgarian-Serb War, 1885

Following the declaration of war, the Serbian army crossed the lightly defended
northwest border of Bulgaria in three columns, intending to converge on Sofia, the
Bulgarian capital. Opposing Bulgarian
forces slowed the Serbian advance through
the mountains sufficiently for Alexander to
move his main army into prepared defenses
at Slivnitsa, about 20 miles northwest of
Sofia. The three Serbian center divisions
arrived at Slivnitsa on November 16 and
halted to recover from the fierce fighting in
the Dragoman Pass. The Morava division to
the south was at Tran, some distance from
its objective Bresnik, and the northern column had bogged down along the Danube.
Between November 17 and November 19,
the Bulgarian and Serbian armies fiercely
fought each other in front of the village,
and, by nightfall of November 19, the
Bulgarians had defeated the Serbians.
On November 20, the defeated Serbian
army began to retreat back to Serbia. After
limited rearguard actions along the way, it
crossed into Serbia by November 24. The
main Bulgarian army crossed into Serbia and
converged on Pirot, where the Serbian army
had dug in on the heights west of the town.
On November 27, the Bulgarian army, led
personally by Prince Alexander, outflanked
the Serbian right, and the remaining Serbian
army fled to Nis. Austria-Hungary intervened
on November 28, and the two leaders agreed
to a cease-fire. Serbian casualties totaled
6,800, compared to 2,300 Bulgarians.
The Treaty of Bucharest, signed on
March 3, 1886, in Bucharest, Romania,
restored peace and the prewar borders
between the two countries. By the following
Tophane Agreement, signed on April 5,
1886, between Bulgaria and the Ottoman
Empire, Sultan Abdulhamid II (18421918)
recognized the prince of Bulgaria as the

governor-general of Eastern Rumelia, still a


part of the Ottoman Empire. Over time, the
Bulgarian government merged the administration and military forces of Eastern Rumelia
with its own and, on September 6, 1908,
declared total independence, including
Eastern Rumelia.
Ironically, neither ruler survived the outcome of the war for long. In August 1886,
a group of army officers, encouraged by the
Russian government, forced Alexander to
abdicate. A three-man regency found a new
ruler, Prince Ferdinand of Saxe-GothaCoburg (18611948), whom the National
Assembly elected as prince in July 1887.
The defeat so damaged Obrenovics position
as ruler of Serbia that he abdicated in
March 1889, and the Serbian crown passed
to a regency in the name of his son
Alexander (18761903).
Robert B. Kane
See also: Alexander of Battenberg, Prince of
Bulgaria (18571893); Berlin, Treaty of,
1878; Obrenovic, Milan (18541901); RussoOttoman War, 18771878; San Stefano,
Treaty of, 1878; Slivnitsa, Battle of, 1885

Further Reading
Jelavich, Barbara. History of the Balkans. 2
vols. Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 1983.
Jelavich, Charles. Tsarist Russia and Balkan
Nationalism: Russian Influence in the Internal Affairs of Bulgaria and Serbia, 1879
1886. Berkeley: University of California
Press, 1958.
Jelavich, Charles, and Barbara Jelavich. The
Establishment of the Balkan National
States, 18041920. Seattle: University of
Washington Press, 1977.
Pavlowitch, Stevan K. A History of the
Balkans, 18041945. London: Longman,
1999.

61

C
Carol I, King of Romania
(18391914)

Carol was almost forced to abdicate over


the Franco-Prussian War of 18701871.
Carol sought to gain independence for
Romania by secretly allying with Russia
beginning in 1875. This policy culminated
in the Russo-Ottoman War of 18771878.
The Congress of Berlin in 1878 confirmed
Romanian independence, and on March 26,
1881, Carol I was proclaimed king of
Romania.
Carol faced the challenge of negotiating
Romania through the difficult waters of
late-nineteenth-century European diplomacy. Romanias geographic location in
southeastern Europe had significant ramifications for the major European powers.
Austria and the Ottoman Empire saw the
country as a buffer against Russian ambitions in the Balkans. Russia, which had
previously assumed a protectorate over
Romania, was interested in securing an outlet on the Mediterranean. Britain sought to
maintain the status quo in the Balkans
while France enjoyed close ties with
Romania, which translated into support for
Romanian nationalism.
As Europe split into two hostile armed
camps, the Romanian government divided
over the alliance with which it should cast
its lot. Conservatives favored the Triple Alliance, while liberals advocated the Triple
Entente. Carol sought to play each side off
against the other. But on October 30, 1883,
despite tensions over Romanians living in
Transylvania, Carol concluded a secret alliance with Austria-Hungary and Germany.
However, relations with Vienna had been

King of Romania, sometimes referred to as


Charles I, Karl Eitel Friedrich was born the
second son of Prince Karl Anton (1811
1885) of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen and
cousin to the king of Prussia on April 20,
1839, in Sigmaringen. He was educated
in Dresden and Bonn and served in the
Prussian army.
The ruler of Wallachia and Moldavia,
Prince Alexandru Cuza (18201873), was
overthrown in a coup detat in 1866. Karl
was advanced as a candidate to succeed
him, which proved satisfactory to the
governments of France, Russia, and the
Ottoman Empire. A plebiscite in April
1866 overwhelmingly approved the selection, and Karl ascended the throne as Carol
I, Prince of Wallachia and Moldavia, on
May 22, 1866.
When Carol became prince, Romania was
part of the Ottoman Empire. In order to be
recognized by the sultan as hereditary
prince, Carol agreed to accept Wallachia
and Moldavias status as an autonomous
principality within the Ottoman Empire,
which meant that all foreign affairs would
continue to be handled by Constantinople.
Carols first actions as prince were to secure
the integrity of his territories and to begin
the process of governmental reform. In
1866, he approved a liberal constitution
modeled on that of Belgium, although it
did impose restrictions on Jews. A proGerman monarch in a Francophile country,

62

Carol II, King of Romania

strained by the First Balkan War in 1912, by


Austro-Hungarian support for Bulgaria, and
by Hungarys treatment of Romanians in
Transylvania. Thereafter, while ostensibly
remaining affiliated with the Triple Alliance, Carol took a more neutral stance,
forced by growing pro-Entente sentiment in
his country. He did present a proposal to
his crown council on August 3, 1914, that
Romania enter World War I on the side of
the Central Powers, but the council rejected
this, probably to Carols relief. The monarchs position became increasingly difficult, as early Russian military successes
against Austro-Hungarian forces in Galicia
led to a rising tide of sentiment for intervention in the war on the Entente side. Carol
died in Sinaia, Romania, on October 10,
1914, and was replaced on the throne by
Ferdinand I (18651927).
Dino E. Buenviaje
See also: Berlin, Treaty of, 1878; Romania in
the Balkan Wars; Romania in World War I

Further Reading
Castellan, Georges. A History of the Romanians. Translated by Nicholas Brady. New
York: East European Monographs, 1989.
Hamilton, Richard F., and Holger H. Herwig,
eds. The Origins of World War I. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 2003.
Hitchins, Keith. Rumania, 18661947.
Oxford: Clarendon, 1994.
Kellog, Frederick. The Road to Romanian
Independence. West Lafayette, IN: Purdue
University Press, 1995.

Carol II, King of Romania


(18931953)
Romanian monarch who reigned from 1930
to 1940, Carol was born on October 15,
1893, at Sinaia, Romania. Carol was the

eldest child of Ferdinand I of Romania and


Princess Marie (18751938) of Great Britain. Carols upbringing was controlled by
his great-uncle Carol I of Romania, who
encouraged his fixation on German militarism, including service in a German army
regiment in Potsdam. Carol toured the front
in the Second Balkan War but took little
part in World War I, save as a diplomatic
envoy to Russia in January 1917. He provoked scandal by deserting and eloping
with Zizi Lambrino (18981953) in September 1918, although the marriage was
later annulled by the Orthodox Church.
During the early 1920s, Carol appeared to
have reformed, marrying Helen of Greece in
March 1921 and fathering a son, Michael.
However, he associated himself with a single
political party, the National Peasants, and he
played little role in running the country,
apart from founding the Romanian Boy
Scouts. Before long, he met a divorce e,
Elena Lupescu (18951977), for whom he
abandoned (Magda) his marriage in
August 1925 and went into exile in Paris, formally renouncing the throne in favor of his
son. His father, Ferdinand, died in 1927, and
in May of the following year, Carol attempted
a coup but was thwarted by British intelligence. On June 6, 1930, he successfully
returned to Bucharest and disbanded the
regency to seize the throne from his son.
Carols reign was disastrous for Romania.
He alienated the upper classes by persecuting the surviving members of his family,
exiling his siblings Nicholas and Ilena and
his ex-wife Helen, allowing his mistress
Lupescu to choose his advisers, and encouraging political gridlock by playing off one
political party against the other.
Carol II allowed Corneliu ZeleaCodreanus (18991938) Iron Guard to
encourage fascism, at least until it began
attacks on Lupescu, who was Jewish. His

63

64

Ceausescu, Nicolae

Portugal. He married Lupescu in 1952 and


died in Estoril, Portugal, on April 4, 1953.
Margaret Sankey
See also: Antonescu, Ion (18821946); Iron
Guard; Romania in World War II

Further Reading
Bolitho, Hector. Roumania under King Carol.
New York: Longmans, Green, 1940.
Easterman, Alexander Levvey. King Carol, Hitler
and Lupescu. London: V. Gollancz, 1942.
Quinlan, Paul D. The Playboy King: Carol II
of Romania. Westport, CT: Greenwood
Press, 1995.

Ceausescu, Nicolae (19181989)


Carol II, king of Romania from June 1930 until
September 1940, in full regalia. Carol was
known more for his status as a playboy than
for his ruling ability. He went into exile in
1940 after being forced to abdicate. (Library
of Congress)

subsequent 1933 banning of the Iron Guard


led to the assassination of two prime ministers. To restore order, after the national elections in February 1938 failed to establish a
political majority for any party, Carol II
declared himself dictator and named the
Orthodox patriarch Miron Christea (1868
1939) as his prime minister. Carol was
unable to protect Romania from the effects
of the German-Soviet Non-Aggression Pact
of August 1939 and was forced to cede part
of Transylvania to Hungary, Bessarabia to
the Soviet Union, and the southern Dobrudja
region to Bulgaria.
Carol II fled the country with Lupescu and
the royal art collection in September 1940,
leaving his son Michael as king under the
control of General Ion Antonescu. He spent
the rest of his life in exile in Brazil and

First secretary of the Romanian Communist


Party (PCR) during 19651989 and
president of Romania during 19741989,
Nicolae Ceausescu was born the third of
10 children to peasant parents on January 26,
1918, in Scornicesti. He received only a
rudimentary primary schooling before he
moved to Bucharest at age 11 to work as a
shoemakers apprentice. Joining the outlawed Union of Communist Youth (UCY)
in 1933, he became a regional secretary in
1936 and secretary of the central committee
in 1938. Ceausescu was first arrested in
November 1933, charged with inciting
a strike and distributing Communist
pamphlets. Upon his fourth conviction in
July 1940, he was imprisoned until
August 1944. In the Tirgu-Jiu prison camp,
he became a protege of Romanian Workers
Party leader Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej
(19011965) and future premier Ion Maurer
(19022000).
After the postwar Communist takeover,
Ceausescu occupied various party posts. He
became regional secretary for Oltenia in
November 1946, deputy in the Ministry of

Ceausescu, Nicolae

Agriculture during 19481950, and deputy


minister of the armed forces during 1950
1954. Appointed in 1952 to the Romanian
Workers Party (PMR) Central Committee,
he was made secretary in 1954 and a Politburo member in 1955. Upon GheorghiuDejs death in 1965, Ceausescu became
first secretary of the renamed PCR, backed
by Prime Minister Maurer.
As with Gheorghiu-Dej, Ceausescu
both supported rapid industrialization and
minimized Soviet control. In 1967, he established diplomatic relations with the Federal
Republic of Germany (FRG, West Germany)
and maintained relations with Israel after the
Six-Day War. Romanian diplomats also
acted as negotiating brokers between the
Democratic Republic of Vietnam (DRV,
North Vietnam) and the United States. Ceausescus popularity rose at home and abroad
when he opposed the 1968 Soviet intervention
in Czechoslovakia, a stance that led to U.S.
president Richard M. Nixons visit to Romania in August 1969 and Ceausescus return
visits to the United States in 1970, 1973, and
1978. He also visited the Peoples Republic
of China (PRC) and the Democratic Peoples
Republic of Korea (DPRK, North Korea) in
June 1971, followed in April 1972 by meetings with Egyptian president Anwar Sadat
and Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO)
head Yasser Arafat. Subsequently, Romania
achieved most-favored nation (MFN) trade
status with the United States in 1975 and
was admitted to international organizations
including the International Monetary Fund
(IMF) and the World Bank.
Internally, the liberal tendencies of
Ceausescus early government in freeing
political prisoners detained under GheorghiuDej and deposing pro-Soviet members of the
Securitate (the Romanian secret service)
soon gave way to nationalism, a personality
cult, and even more stringent Securitate

surveillance. Upon the retirement of Premier


Maurer in 1974, Ceausescu assumed the
newly created office of president of the republic. Natural disasters such as poor harvests
and the 1977 earthquake combined with reckless trade practices and economic mismanagement led to an immense foreign debt
crisis and domestic shortages. In response,
Ceausescu imposed strict rationing for
food and electrical power and, to boost the
countrys workforce, forbade abortion and contraception. His regime also began a systematization campaign to resettle villagers in agroindustrial centers, a movement that led to massive discontent and the destruction of historical
landmarks. As his popular support eroded,
Ceausescu increasingly surrounded himself
with sycophants and appointed family members to strategic posts. His wife Elena (1916
1989) became a Central Committee member
in July 1972, a member of the Politburo and
head of the PCRs personnel section in 1973,
and first deputy prime minister in 1980.
In the 1980s, Romanias international
relations deteriorated as growing condemnation of human rights abuses accumulated.
This compelled Ceausescu to renounce
Romanias MFN status in 1988 before it
could be revoked by the U.S. government.
Unrest spread throughout Romania, marked
by brutally repressed miners strikes (1977,
1983, and 1986), the protest marches
of 1987 in Ias i and Brasov, and, in
March 1989, an internationally released
letter signed by six senior PCR members in
the name of the National Salvation Front
(NSF). Shortly after Ceausescus November 1989 reelection for another five-year
term, antigovernment demonstrations in
Timisoara in December 1989 left 122 dead
after an army intervention. Returning
from a state visit to Iran on December 20,
Ceausescu denounced the demonstrators
and called for a pro-government rally in

65

66

Cer Mountain, Battle of, 1914

Bucharest. This evolved into another protest


and led to the defection of much of the army.
Ceausescu and his wife fled the capital in a
helicopter but were eventually captured and
detained in the Targoviste military garrison.
There they were tried by a tribunal of the
NSF and executed on December 25, 1989.
Anna M. Wittmann
See also: Warsaw Pact

Further Reading
Deletant, Dennis. Ceausescu and the Securitate: Coercion and Dissent in Romania,
19651989. New York: Sharpe, 1995
Fischer, Mary Ellen. Nicolae Ceausescu: A
Study in Political Leadership. Boulder,
CO: Lynne Rienner, 1989

Cer Mountain, Battle of, 1914


The Battle of Cer Mountain was fought
between the Serbian army and the invading
Austro-Hungarian army during August
1524, 1914, around Cer Mountain and surrounding villages and towns in northwest
Serbia near the Croatian border. The Serbians won, making the battle the first Allied
victory over the Central Powers in World
War I.
On July 28, 1914, a month after the
assassination of Austrian archduke Franz
Ferdinand, Austria-Hungary declared war
on Serbia. The Austro-Hungarian army
shelled Belgrade, the Serbian capital, the
next day and Serbian towns along the
Bosnia-Serbian border for two weeks, using
the shelling as cover to construct pontoon
bridges across the Sava and Drina Rivers.
To oppose an Austrian invasion, Serbian
chief of the general staff Field Marshal
Radomir Putnik (18471917) and generals
Stepa Stepanovic (18561929) and Pavle
Jurisich Sturm (18481922) deployed

180,000 soldiers around Volhevo in northwest Serbia.


The Austrians had allocated about
200,000 men for the pending invasion. In
early August, the Austro-Hungarians, commanded by General Oskar Potiorek (1853
1933), made some preliminary attacks
across the Danube River, which the Serbians
repulsed with heavy losses to the invaders.
On August 12, Austro-Hungarian troops
crossed the Drina River to the west of
Loznitsa and Lyeshnitsa and the Sava
River north of Shobotz. By August 14, the
Austro-Hungarian forces had established a
100-mile front, intending to converge on
Volhevo.
The Austro-Hungarians possessed
modern rifles and twice as many machine
guns and artillery as the Serbians, and had
better munitions stocks. The Serbian army
was critically short of modern rifles and
artillery and had just begun to replenish the
munitions that it had used in the recently
ended Second Balkan War. As many as
50,000 Serbian soldiers went to the front
with only pitchforks and a standard-issue
greatcoat and the traditional Serbian cap.
However, many Serbians were experienced
veterans of the Balkan Wars and were highly
motivated and better trained than their
Austro-Hungarian counterparts.
About 11:00 p.m., on August 15, fighting
erupted when Serbian soldiers first encountered Austro-Hungarian outposts on the
slopes of the Cer. By the morning of
August 16, the Serbians had seized the
Divacha range and dislodged the AustroHungarians from their positions in Borino
Selo, who, after heavy casualties, retreated
in some disorder.
Between August 17 and August 20, the
Serbians fought well against the AustroHungarians and captured a number of villages and towns that the Austro-Hungarian

etniks
C

army had taken in its initial advances across


the Drina and Sava Rivers. The Serbian
army generally managed to stop repeated
Austro-Hungarian advances and repulsed
the Austro-Hungarians with heavy losses.
In the early morning of August 19, the Serbians routed the Austro-Hungarians from
Rashulijacha, causing them to withdraw
back across the Drina River on August 20.
Many Austro-Hungarian soldiers, fleeing in
panic, drowned in the river.
With the Austro-Hungarians retreating
from Cer, the Serbians sought to recapture
Sabac, now heavily fortified. On August 21
and 22, the Serbian army fought its way to
the western approaches of the town and, by
the evening of August 23, had completely
encircled the town. The next day, they discovered that the Austro-Hungarians had
withdrawn the previous night. By 4:00 p.m.
, August 23, the Serbian army reached the
banks of the Sava River, ending the first
Austro-Hungarian invasion of Serbia.
The Serbians suffered 3,000 killed and
15,000 wounded. The Austro-Hungarian
forces had about 7,000 dead and 30,000
wounded. The Serbians discovered that
Serbs, Croats, and Bosnian Muslims,
serving with the Austro-Hungarian army,
had murdered hundreds of Serbian men,
women, and children in the villages occupied by the Austro-Hungarian army.
Robert B. Kane
See also: Austria-Hungary in the Balkans
during World War I; Balkan War, Second,
1913

Further Reading
Fryer, Charles E. J. The Destruction of Serbia
in 1915. Boulder, CO: East European
Monographs, 1997.
Glenny, Misha. The Balkans: Nationalism,
War, and the Great Powers, 18041999.
New York: Viking, 2000.

Pavlowitch, Stevan K. Serbia: The History of


an Idea. New York: New York University
Press, 2002.

etniks
C
Bands of irregular guerrilla fighters called
etniks (from the Serbo-Croat term cetnici)
C
have come to be known for their ferocity in
battle and their espousal of Serbian nationalism. The Cetnik tradition originated during
the time of the Ottoman Empire, when
etniks were formed to fight the
bands of C
Turkish occupiers. These bands were first
organized into recognizable military formations during the Balkan Wars (19121913).
During World War I, they became an integral part of the Royal Serbian Army, often
operating as special forces behind enemy
lines. This army was one of the first in
Europe to have such guerrilla detachments
in its ranks. During World War II and the
etnik
Axis occupation of Yugoslavia, C
bands in Serbia and Montenegro emerged
under the command of General Draz a
Mihajlovic (18921946), who decided to
stay on to fight the Germans and Italians
after the capitulation of the government in
April 1941. After liberating areas of Serbia
etniks were
toward the end of 1941, the C
driven into Montenegro and Bosnia by superior German forces.
A complicated and bitter civil war then
etniks and the Combroke out between the C
munist Partisans led by Josip Broz Tito. Initially supported by the Western Allies, the
etniks were later abandoned because of
C
their alleged collaboration with the Axis
occupiers. The British government also cal etniks would
culated that the entirely Serb C
not be able to resolve the deep divisions of
the Yugoslav peoples in the postwar period.
Increased Western political and military

67

68

Chataldzha, Battle of, 1912

assistance was then made available to Titos


Partisans. By the end of 1944, Mihajlovics
Cetniks had been defeated and discredited
by the Communists.
In April 1946, Mihajlovic was tried and
executed as an alleged collaborator and
traitor by the new Communist Yugoslav
etnik antigovernment. In parts of Serbia, C
Communist bands were in existence until
etniks
the early 1950s. Large numbers of C
fled Yugoslavia after the war and settled in
North America and Western Europe; during
the 1960s and 1970s, they occasionally
undertook acts of terrorism in Yugoslavia.
A number of paramilitary forces calling
etniks emerged in Serbia,
themselves C
mainly in response to the rebellion of the
Krajina Serbs in Croatia in 1990. These
forces later fought in Croatia and Bosnia,
where they are alleged to have committed
many war crimes against non-Serbs.
These contemporary Cetniks, particularly
those loyal to the Serbian Radical Party
(SRS) and led by Vojislav Seselj (1954),
claim to be the latter-day followers of
Mihajlovic and one of his surviving
commanders in exile, Momcilo Djuic
(19071999). They have also called for the
restoration of the exiled crown prince of
Yugoslavia, Aleksandar Karageorgevic .
Early supporters of the new nationalist
agenda of Serbian president Slobodan
etniks later fell out
Milos evic , Seseljs C
with their onetime ally, mainly because of
his alleged betrayal of the Bosnian and
Croatian Serbs. Bitterly hostile toward both
communism and Titos Yugoslavia, which
they claimed was opposed to the interests
etniks also
of the Serbs, Serbias new C
strove to bring about the establishment of a
royalist and Orthodox Greater Serbia on
the ruins of the Yugoslav federation.
Modern Serb Cetniks have used an insignia copied from earlier C etnik modelsa

black flag with a white skull and crossbones, with the words Freedom or Death
inscribed below it, and use of the threefingered, or Orthodox, salute. A symbol of
mourning for C etniks in the past, beards
have also been grown by todays Cetniks.
Their oath has remained, as before: For
King and Country.
Marko Milivojevic
See also: Mihajlovic , Dragoljub Draz a
(18921946); Nedic , Milan (18771946);
Yugoslav Wars, 19911995

Further Reading
Ramet, Sabrina P. The Three Yugoslavias:
State-Building and Legitimation, 1918
2005. Bloomington: Indiana University
Press, 2006.
Tomashevich, Jozo. The Chetniks: War and
Revolution in Yugoslavia, 19411945.
Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press,
2001.

Chataldzha, Battle of, 1912


The battle of Chataldzha (Turkish: Catalaca)
was an important battle between the
Bulgarian and Ottoman armies during the
First Balkan War in 1912. The Chataldzha
fortifications were the final defensive lines
for Constantinople, taking their name from
a village and railroad station located in the
center of the positions. They were located
in Thrace, about 20 miles outside the Ottoman capital, and extended about 30 miles
from the Black Sea to the Sea of Marmora.
The Ottomans had constructed the fortifications during the Russo-Ottoman War of
18771878. They consisted of trenches,
machine gun and light artillery positions,
and heavy artillery to the rear. Natural
obstacles, such as marshes, lakes, and arms
of the seas, were also a part of the lines.

Chataldzha, Battle of, 1912

The Ottoman First, Second, and Third


Corps manned the positions, with around
140,000 men and artillery pieces. Nizam
Pasha (?1913) commanded the Ottoman
forces.
After their victory at Lyule BurgasBuni
Hisar, the Bulgarian First and Third Armies
slowly advanced to Chataldzha. The first
Bulgarian patrols arrived at Chataldzha on
November 9. By November 14, most of the
First and Third Armies were in front of the
lines. The commander of the Bulgarian
Third Army, General Radko Dimitriev
(18591918), assumed command of both
armies. The Ottomans formally requested
an armistice on November 12. Nevertheless,
the Bulgarian commander in chief, Czar
Ferdinand, was determined to enter Constantinople. That same day, he ordered an
attack. Others in the Bulgarian command,
however, were not convinced this was a
good idea. A Bulgarian presence in Constantinople would undoubtedly aggravate
Bulgarias traditional Russian ally. The
Russians had long had their own pretensions
to the ancient imperial capital. The Bulgarian armies were at the end of a tenuous
logistical system, with the besieged city of
Adrianople astride their supply lines.
Finally, cholera had broken out in the Bulgarian ranks. Deputy Commander in Chief
General Mihail Savov (18571928) traveled
to Dimitrievs headquarters on November 15
to discuss the situation. The two Bulgarian
generals agreed to make an attempt on the
Chataldzha lines. The czar again ordered an
attack on November 16.
At 0500 hours on a foggy November 17,
the Bulgarians began their attack. General
Dimitriev ordered a full frontal assault all
along the lines. No tactical subtlety was
employed. Effective Ottoman artillery, supplemented by fire from Ottoman warships

in the Sea of Marmara and the Black Sea,


pinned the Bulgarians down. The Bulgarians
did succeed in taking an Ottoman position
but were unable to hold it in the face of a
determined counterattack. This was the
closest they came to Constantinople.
At 1400 hours on November 18, General
Dimitriev ordered the attacks discontinued.
The Bulgarians suffered 1,482 dead, 9,120
wounded, and 1,401 missing. Ottoman
losses were much lower. After the battle,
the Bulgarians were ready for the armistice.
After the renewal of fighting on February 5, 1913, several engagements occurred
in front of the Chataldzha lines. On February 9, an Ottoman offensive launched in
conjunction with an offensive at Bulair, succeeded in advancing 1520 kilometers in
the face of limited Bulgarian resistance.
The Bulgarians then occupied strong defensive positions that blocked further Ottoman
advance. Minor engagements occurred
along the lines for the following month.
Additional fighting occurred at Chataldzha
in conjunction with the final Bulgarian assault
on Adrianople. A Bulgarian attack began on
March 25. The Bulgarians succeeded in retaking some of the land they had lost in February,
with heavy casualties on both sides. Fighting
continued until April 3. On April 15, an armistice brought an end to the fighting in the First
Balkan War.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Balkan War, First, 19121913; Bulgaria in the Balkan Wars; Dimitriev, Radko
(18591918); Lyule BurgasBuni Hisar, Battle of, 1912; Ottoman Empire in the Balkan
Wars; Savov, Mihail (18571928)

Further Reading
Erickson, Edward J. Defeat in Detail: The
Ottoman Army in the Balkans, 19121913.
Westport, CT: Praeger, 2003.

69

70

Cherniaev, M. G.
Hall, Richard C. The Balkan Wars: Prelude to
the First World War. London: Routledge,
2000.

Cherniaev, M. G. (18241898)
Mikhail Grgorevich Cherniaev (Chernyayev) was a Russian soldier who led the
Serbian forces in their unsuccessful war
against the Ottoman Empire in 1876. Born
into the family of a military officer family
stationed at Bendery, Bessarabia, on October 22, 1824, he embarked on a military
career that took him to the fighting in the
Crimean War as well as to the Caucasus
and to Central Asia.
Cherniaevs most notable military
achievement was his march across the central Asian steppes and the subsequent conquest of Tashkent in 1865. This began the
process that brought most of modern Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and
Uzbekistan under Russian control. In 1875,
Serbian peasants in Bosnia-Herzegovina
revolted against Ottoman rule. This captured
the imagination of Pan Slavists in Russia.
They sought a means to liberate their fellow
Orthodox Slavs from Ottoman rule, and in
doing so expand Russian influence into the
Balkans.
Cherniaev became a prominent Russian
advocate for intervention in the Balkans on
behalf of the Serbs. In 1876, he obtained
the position of commander in chief of the
Serbian army. His military efforts met with
no success in the Balkans. After suffering
several defeats at the hands of the Ottomans,
he resigned his command in October 1876.
Serbia had to conclude an armistice.
Cherniaev eventually returned to Russia.
He died on his estate near Mogliev on
August 3, 1898. While Cherniaev proved to
be an incompetent commander for Serbia,
his failures by no means diminished

the ardor of the Russian Pan Slavs for intervention in the Balkans. In 1877, they would
succeed in bringing Russia into direct confrontation with the Ottomans in the RussoOttoman War. This was an important step
in the end of Ottoman rule in southeastern
Europe.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Montenegro in Balkan Events,
18761878; Russo-Ottoman War, 18771878;
Serbo-Ottoman War, 1876

Further Reading
Jelavich, Barbara. History of the Balkans.
Vol. 1, Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries. Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 1983.
MacKenzie, David. The Lion of Tashkent: The
Career of General M. G. Cherniaev. Athens:
University of Georgia Press, 1974.
MacKenzie, David. The Serbs and Russian
Pan-Slavism, 18751878. Ithaca, NY:
Cornell University Press, 1976.

Cold War in the Balkans


The Cold War developed in the years following the close of World War II and ended
with the collapse of the Soviet Union in
December 1991. The defining aspect of the
Cold War was the confrontation between
the United States and the Soviet Union and
the associated allies and coalition partners
lining up on either side. During the war
against Hitlers Germany, the United States,
Great Britain, and the Soviet Union were
allies, and the leaders of eachFranklin
Roosevelt, Winston Churchill, and Josef
Stalinhad developed an effective working
relationship in pushing back and ultimately
defeating the Third Reich.
With Roosevelts death in April
1945, coupled with the loss of the unifying
effect of a common enemy as Germany

Cold War in the Balkans

surrendered, the three great victors of World


War II lost the unity of purpose that had
aided in the successful prosecution of the
war. Within the United States, with Roosevelt gone from the scene, two schools of
thought arose regarding the nature of the
postwar world. One such school of thought
hoped that continued cooperation between
the U.S.United Kingdom alliance and the
Soviet Union would provide a secure foundation upon which global peace and prosperity might be built; while the other
school doubted the desire for cooperation
on the part of the Eastern Bloc. The optimistic point of view was soon tested in
the unforgiving realm of mid-twentiethcentury international politics, as both sides
attempted to maneuver for maximum advantage in terms of both security and economic
prospects.
As the defeat of Nazi Germany became
apparent, Churchill met with Stalin in
Moscow in October 1944 and discussed the
nature of postwar Europe. The British
leader, in the spirit of the wartime leadership
informality, presented a sheet of paper to
Stalin that became known as the percentages agreement regarding the disposition
of postwar southeastern Europe and the Balkans. Churchill advocated for a 90 percent
British role in Greece (in accord with the
United States) and a 10 percent role for the
Soviet Union. British interests continued to
rely on sea power, and the Eastern Mediterranean was a fundamental interest for the
United Kingdom as World War II was drawing to an end. In terms of Hungary and
Yugoslavia, he proposed a 50/50 split
between Britain and the Soviet Union.
Acknowledging the interest of Stalin in the
Black Sea, Churchill listed a 90 percent
Soviet level of influence in Romania and a
75 percent level in Bulgaria. Churchill later
would write that Stalin, using a blue pencil,

simply made a mark on the sheet of paper


and passed it back in what was taken as
silent agreement to what Churchill had
proposed.
When the U.S. leadership received word
of this informal agreement, presidential
counselor Harry Hopkins persuaded Roosevelt to send a cable to Stalin that stated: In
this global war there is literally no question,
political or military, in which the United
States is not interested in. Some analysts
and historians argue that when the concepts
embedded in this October 1944 cable were
relayed to Stalin, this marked the actual
beginning of the Cold War. For in the communication, President Roosevelt had
informed Stalin that the United States
reserved the right to weigh in on any
international decision including those
involving the Balkans and southeastern
Europe. What caused great concern in the
Kremlin was that the United States and its
allies would be denying the Soviet Union
the same right within Western spheres of
influence; this is, in fact, what took place in
Italy. In short, the United States introduced
a postwar policy perspective that denied the
Soviet Union equal status to the United
States, at least from the Russian perspective.
From the American perspective, it
had become apparent that Soviet Russia
intended to work for the destruction of capitalism and the Western way of life, and to
extend the Kremlins version of communism
around the globe. Irrespective of ideological
concerns, it also became apparent to
American leaders that the modus operandi
for Stalin was to quietly enter into prolonged
discussions regarding an issue while the
Soviet army advanced; once the army was
in place, Stalin would then begin to negotiate seriously. This was not lost on the
Americans, as Harry Truman stated after
taking the reins of the presidency: they

71

72

Cold War in the Balkans

confront us with an accomplished fact and


then there is little we can do.
At the close of World War II, Moscow and
the Red Army enjoyed a preponderance of
influence in southeastern Europe and the
Balkans except in Greece and Turkey; and
within the United States, a determination
developed that it would be necessary for
the security of Western interests to block
the expected Soviet attempts at expansion.
While the Soviets consolidated gains in
Romania and Bulgaria, it supported a leftist
armed insurgency in Greece. As a result,
the United States committed sizable resources as part of the Truman Doctrine to
fight the Kremlins destabilizing efforts in
Greece and Turkey. Thus, socialist governments came to power or were put into
power by the Soviet Union in almost all of
the Balkan states with the exception of
Greece and Turkey, who became aligned
with the United States and, eventually,
the North Atlantic Treaty Organization
(NATO). Bulgaria and Romania, meanwhile, became members of the Soviet-led
Warsaw Pact. Unfortunately for the designs
within the Kremlin, Yugoslavia and Albania
became exceedingly independent-minded
and circumvented Moscows attempt at creating extended access into the eastern
Mediterranean.
At the beginning of the Cold War, Yugoslavia was arguably the most anti-Western
nation in Europe, and Belgrade was selected as headquarters by Stalin of the Cominform. However, the leader of Yugoslavia,
Josip Broz Tito, was also one of the most
independent-minded leaders in all of Europe
and found himself in significant conflict
with the wishes of the Kremlin. Exploiting
this fissure, the United States supported
Yugoslavias break from the Cominform in
1948. Tito then entered into the Balkan
Pact with Greece and Turkey, and by

1954, the Soviet Unions control in the Balkans was largely confined to the Black Sea
area by virtue of Moscows control in Bulgaria and Romania.
The leader of Albania, Enver Hoxha
(19081985), had developed closer ties to
the Soviets than had Tito, but after Stalins
death in 1953, Albanias relationship with
Moscow weakened as Khrushchev attempted
to focus on improving relations with Tito
and Yugoslavia. By 1956, Hoxha left for
China to visit with Mao Zedong, and the Peoples Republic of China soon became Albanias largest supplier of aid. Moscow became
extremely displeased with Albania, and in
November 1961, every Warsaw Pact nation
broke relations with Albania.
Even within the Black Sea region, as witnessed in Romania during the 1960s and
1970s, Moscows influence also dissipated
as Russias share of Romanias foreign
trade fell from 40 percent in 1965 to 16 percent by 1974. Moreover, Romania was the
only Eastern Bloc state to participate in the
1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles, as
the nation became more open to the West
and to China. By the time of the Soviet
Unions collapse in 1991, the level of influence the Kremlin enjoyed in the Balkans
immediately after the close of the Second
World War had receded considerably as the
Balkan states struggled to find their own
way and to lessen the impact of great
power politics upon the region.
James Brian McNabb
See also: Hoxha, Enver (19081985); NATO
in the Balkans; Tito, Josip Broz (18921980);
Truman Doctrine; Yugoslav Overflight
Incidents, 1946; Yugoslav-Soviet Split

Further Reading
Boll, Michael M. Cold War in the Balkans:
American Foreign Policy and the Emergence of Communist Bulgaria, 19431947.

Constantine I, King of Greece


Lexington: University of Kentucky Press,
1984.
Kuniholm, Bruce. The Origins of the Cold War
in the Near East: Great Power Conflict and
Diplomacy in Iran, Turkey, and Greece.
Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press,
1980.
Rajak, Svetozar. Chapter 10: The Cold
War in the Balkans, 19451956. In The
Cambridge History of the Cold War, edited
by Melvyn Leffler and Arne Westad, vol. 1,
Origins, 19451962. Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 2010.
Resis, Albert. The Churchill-Stalin Secret
Percentages Agreement on the Balkans,
Moscow, October, 1944, American Historical Review 83 (April 1978): 36887.

Constantine I, King of Greece


(18681923)
Born in Athens on July 21, 1868, Constantine was the first modern Greek king born
on Greek soil. He was the eldest son of
King George (18901947), born Prince
William of Denmark and brother of Queen
Alexandra of England, who was brought to
Athens in 1863 to establish a new dynasty.
Constantines mother was Grand Duchess
Olga of Russia, daughter of the Grand
Duke Constantine (18511913) and granddaughter of Czar Nicholas I.
Constantine (18271892) was educated
privately within the royal palace and became
fluent in English, French, German, and
classical Greek. He joined the Greek army
as a lieutenant, and soldiering soon became
a passion. After studying at the Leipzig and
Heidelberg universities in Germany, Constantine served for a time as an officer in
the German army. In 1889 he married
Sophia, sister of Kaiser Wilhelm II.
In 1897, Constantine led the Greek army
to defeat in fighting against Turkey, which

Constantine I, king of Greece during World


War I. (Library of Congress)

nearly cost George I the throne. In 1909,


disgruntled Greek army officers forced
Constantine into exile, but he returned to
Greece when Eleutherios Venizelos (1864
1936) became premier in October 1910.
Constantine restored his military reputation
in 1912 when he led the army to victory
over Turkey in the First Balkan War and
secured Salonika.
In March 1913, Constantine became king
after the assassination of his father. During
the early period of his reign, Constantine
was immensely popular. In 1913, he again
led the army to victory, defeating a badly
weakened Bulgaria and annexing Kavala,
after Salonika the second-most important
port in the northern Aegean. Constantine
had ended Ottoman rule in southern Macedonia, Epirus, and the islands of the archipelago, and some Greeks dared to hope that
he might secure Constantinople itself.

73

74

Constantine I, King of Greece

World War I, however, brought crisis for


Greece. The population was torn in their
loyalties. Greeks were grateful to France,
Britain, and Russia for helping them secure
their freedom a century before, but they
also admired Germany, with which Constantine also had strong ties. In November 1914,
Turkey entered the war on the side of the
Central Powers. A victorious Ottoman
Empire would be a major blow to Greek
aspirations, and Premier Venizelos wanted
Greece to join the war on the side of the
Entente. The king favored Germany, but raison detat, most notably Allied naval power
in the Mediterranean, led him to demand
Greek neutrality.
In 1915, the Allies pressed Greece to join
their side, promising Turkish territory if
Greece would participate in operations
against the Dardanelles. Constantine
refused, whereupon Venizelos resigned in
March and Constantine took real power
himself; but Venizelos won the June 1915
elections and returned to the premiership.
Sharp differences between Venizelos and
Constantine led to political chaos in Greece
and created the conditions for Allied intervention. In October, Venize los invited in
the Allies, who landed troops at Salonika.
Constantine then demanded that Venizelos resign. Following the Allied defeat in
the Gallipoli campaign at the end of 1915,
Constantine sided with the Central Powers.
While he mobilized the Greek army against
Bulgaria, he also failed to honor a 1913
treaty pledging support to Serbia if Bulgaria
invaded that country. In May 1916, he
surrendered Fort Rupel to Bulgaria,
opening eastern Macedonia to the threat of
Central Powers attack and imperiling the
Allied position at Salonika. In August, the
Bulgarians seized the port of Kavalla. Meanwhile, with Allied assistance, Venize los

established a rival Greek government in


Crete and Salonika. At the same time, however, the Allies continued to negotiate with
Constantine.
On December 1, French sailors and
marines landed from ships at Athens and
were attacked and driven off by Greek
royalist troops and civilians. This fiasco led
the Entente to act, although Constantine
remained in power for a time because of
his friendship with French premier Aristide
Briand. The latters departure from office
brought Allied intervention in June 1917.
Constantine was forced into exile in Switzerland with his eldest son, Crown Prince
George, who was strongly pro-German.
Constantines younger son Alexander
(18931920) stayed behind in Greece to act
in his absence, and Venize los returned to
Athens as premier.
Alexander died in October 1920 from the
bite of a pet monkey, and his younger
brother, Paul (19011964), declined the
throne. Subsequently, Venizelos sought to
renew his mandate. The November 1920
elections brought a crushing defeat for him
and his followers, with the result that Constantine returned to Greece that December
to a tumultuous reception. However, Constantines decision to continue an imperialist
war against Turkey in western Anatolia,
which ended in the complete defeat of the
Greeks, proved his undoing. In September 1922, the army forced him to abdicate
in favor of the crown prince as King George
II. Constantine, Sophia, and some other
members of the royal family settled in
Palermo, Sicily, where Constantine died on
January 11, 1923.
Spencer C. Tucker
See also: Greco-Turkish War, 19191922;
National Schism (Greece), 19161917; Venizelos, Eleutherios (18641936)

Contested Zone (Macedonia), 1912

Further Reading
Clogg, Richard. A Short History of Modern
Greece. Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 1979.
Hibben, Paxton. Constantine I and the Greek
People. New York: Century, 1920.
Leontaritis, George B. Greece and the First
World War: From Neutrality to Intervention, 19171918. New York: Columbia University Press, 1940.
Melas, George M. Ex-King Constantine and
the War. London: Hutchinson, 1920.
Valti, Luc. Mon Ami le Roi: La Verite sur Constan tin de Gre`ce. Paris: Editions de France,
1938.
Willmore, J. Selden. The Story of King Constantine as Revealed in the Greek White
Book. London: Longmans, Green, 1919.

Constantinople, Treaty of, 1913


The Treaty of Constantinople, signed on
September 30, 1913, between Bulgaria and
the Ottoman Empire, ended the Second Balkan War between these two states. The
Treaty of London of May 1913 ended the
First Balkan War between the Balkan allies
and the Ottoman Empire. This treaty limited
Ottoman presence in Europe to the territory
east of a line from Enez on the Aegean Sea
to Midya on the Black Sea. Bulgaria
obtained much of western Thrace, including
the important city of Adrianople (Edirne,
Odrin). The Balkan allies soon fought
among themselves over the division of Ottoman spoils. The Ottomans took advantage of
this conflict to enter the war against Bulgaria
on July 12 and to reoccupy much of the
territory they had lost to Bulgaria. They
entered Adrianople on July 23and crossed
the prewar Bulgarian frontier several days
later. The Ottomans preferred to deal with
the Bulgarians separately from the Greeks,
Romanians, and Serbs.

Talks began on September 6 in Constantinople. The Bulgarians had little basis for negotiation. The Ottomans regained almost all the
territory the Bulgarians had taken in the battles
of Lozengrad, Lyule BurgasBuni Hisar, and
Adrianople during the First Balkan War. The
Bulgarians retained western Thrace, with a
small Aegean port at Dedeagach, and the
northeastern corner of Thrace on the Black
Sea. Immediately after the signing of the
treaty, the Bulgarians and Ottomans began
negotiations for an alliance directed against
Greece and Serbia. As soon as the Balkan
Wars were concluded, the two losing states in
the Balkan Wars sought to reverse its dictates.
These negotiations did not succeed. The two
recent enemies never could overcome their distrust of each other. The talks eventually
became, however, a basis for the BulgarianOttoman agreement of September 3, 1915,
which was a part of Bulgarias entry into
World War I on the side of the Central Powers.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Balkan War, Second, 1913; Bulgaria
in the Balkan Wars; Ottoman Empire in the
Balkan Wars

Further Reading
Hall, Richard C. The Balkan Wars, 1912
1913: Prelude to the First World War.
London: Routledge, 2000.
Helmreich, E. C. The Diplomacy of the Balkan
Wars, 19121913. Cambridge, MA:
Harvard University Press, 1938.
Rossos, Andrew. Russia and the Balkans:
Inter-Balkan Rivalries and Russian Foreign
Policy 19081914. Toronto: University of
Toronto Press, 1981.

Contested Zone (Macedonia),


1912
The Contested Zone was an area of northwestern Macedonia in the Ottoman vilayets

75

76

Corfu Channel Incident, 1946

of Kosova and Monastir, extending from Lake


Ohrid in a northeasterly direction along the
southeastern edge of the Shar Mountains as
far as the Serbian frontier, including the cities
of Skoplje and Kumanovo.
This territory was delineated in the secret
annex of the Bulgarian-Serbian alliance
agreement of March 1912. In the event of a
successful war against the Ottoman Empire,
if Macedonia could not obtain autonomy,
then Bulgaria and Serbia would divide it.
The treaty allotted the region northwest of
the Contested Zone to Serbia, and the region
southeast of the zone to Bulgaria. The treaty
assigned the disposition of the contested
zone to the arbitration of the Russian czar.
He could divided it between Bulgaria and Serbia or assign it all to one or the other, according to his own predilections. Both Bulgaria
and Serbia accepted this arraignment as a
means to facilitate the alliance agreement.
In order to persuade the Bulgarians to
accept the agreement, the Russians gave
them private assurances that they would
obtain the eastern bank of the Drin River at
the town of Struga north of Lake Ohrid.
The Bulgarians anticipated that they would
receive most, if not all, of the Contested
Zone. When Austro-Hungarian objections
to the Serbian presence in northern Albanian
and the Adriatic coast forced the Serbs to
withdraw from these regions, they sought
compensation in Macedonia, including the
entire Contested Zone. This brought them
into conflict with their Bulgarian allies.
Russian diplomacy failed to resolve the problem. Before the Russian czar could exercise
his arbitration obligations, the Bulgarians
attacked their Serbian allies on June 29,
1913. This brought about the Second Balkan
War and the complete defeat of Bulgaria.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Balkan Wars, 19121913, Causes

Further Reading
Helmreich, E. C. The Diplomacy of the Balkan
Wars 19121913. New York: Russell &
Russell, 1969.
Russos, Andrew. Russia and the Balkans:
Inter-Balkan Rivalries and Russian Foreign
Policy 19081914. Toronto: University of
Toronto Press, 1981.
Thadden, Edward C. Russia and the Balkan
Alliance of 1912. University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, 1965.

Corfu Channel Incident, 1946


The Corfu Channel Incident consisted of
three separate events in 1946, involving
British Royal Navy ships in the channel
between Corfu and the Albanian coast and
the new Communist government of Albania
On May 15, 1946, Albanian forts fired on
the cruisers HMS Orion and HMS Superb as
they were crossing the Corfu Channel, following an inspection of the strait. The ships
were not hit, but the British government formally demanded an official apology from
the Albanian government. The Albanians
refused, claiming that the British ships had
entered Albanian territorial waters.
On October 22, 1946, the cruisers HMS
Mauritius and HMS Leander and the
destroyers HMS Saumarez and HMS Volage
sailed northward through the Corfu Channel
to test the Albanian reaction to their right of
innocent passage. As the ships passed close
to the Albanian coast near the Bay of
Saranda, the Saumarez hit a mine, which
blew off its bow. As the Volage began towing the Saumarez south to Corfu harbor, it
also hit a mine, blowing off its bow. After
12 hours, both ships managed to reach
Corfu harbor. The two ships suffered 44
dead and 42 injured, and the Saumarez was
damaged beyond repair.

Corfu Declaration, 1917

On November 1213, 1946, the Royal


Navy carried out an additional minesweeping
operation in the Corfu Channel in Albanian
territorial waters without the consent of the
Albanian government. The ships, covered by
an aircraft carrier, cruisers, and other warships, discovered and cut the moorings of 22
contact mines. The minefield appeared to
have been deliberately designed and not randomly placed. British authorities at Malta
examined two of the cut mines and determined that they were German, but without
any rust and marine growth. They had been
freshly painted, and the mooring cables were
recently lubricated. The examiners concluded
that two Yugoslav minelayers at the request of
the Albanian government had laid the mines
around October 20.
The Albanian prime minister Enver
Hoxha (19081985) complained to the
United Nations about the British incursion
into Albanian waters. On December 9,
1946, Britain accused Albania of laying the
mines and demanded reparations for the earlier incidents. The Albanian government
denied the British allegations in a reply,
received by the British on December 21.
Britain brought a case against Albania to
the International Court of Justice. In December 1949, the court directed Albania to pay
some 800,000 ($1,904,679) to Britain.
The Albanian government refused to pay
anything. Britain then broke off talks aimed
at establishing diplomatic relations with the
postWorld War II Albanian government.
The two countries ultimately restored diplomatic relations in 1991. Five years later,
Albania agreed to pay $2 million to Britain
in delayed reparations. Britain, in return,
gave the Albanian government 1,574 kilograms of gold, looted by the Axis powers
and awarded to Albania by a postwar committee, that Britain had held since 1948.
Robert B. Kane

See also: Cold War in the Balkans; Hoxha,


Enver (19081985)

Further Reading
Gardiner, Leslie. The Eagle Spreads His
Claws: A History of the Corfu Channel Dispute and of Albanias Relations with the
West, 19451965 (book review by David
Floyd). International Affairs 43, no. 2
(April 1967): 37273.
Prifti, Peter R. Socialist Albania since 1944:
Domestic and Foreign Developments.
Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1978.
Wright, Quincy. The Corfu Channel Case.
American Journal of International Law 43,
no. 3 (July 1949): 49194.

Corfu Declaration, 1917


The Corfu Declaration was a manifesto
issued on July 20, 1917, by representatives
of the Serbian, Croatian, and Slovenian peoples announcing their intention to form a
united kingdom after the war. The declaration was the product of a conference on the
Adriatic island of Corfu during July 720,
1917. Corfu was controlled by the Serbian
government-in-exile and protected by the
Allied navies. Attending the conference were
members of the Yugoslav Committee and
representatives of the Serbian governmentin-exile. Ante Trumbic (18641938) led the
Yugoslav Committee, representing Croats
and Slovenes. In 1914, lands inhabited
by both these peoples were part of the
Austro-Hungarian Empire. Nicola Pasic
(18451926) led the Serbia government-inexile. Representatives of the Kingdom of
Montenegro were also present.
The agreement had 13 points. Among
them was the decision by these Slavic peoples to create a united state following the
defeat of the Central Powers. A constitutional monarchy under the Karageorgevic

77

78

Corfu Incident, 1923

dynasty of Serbia, it would be known as the


Kingdom of the Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes.
There was to be full equality among all
the ethnic groups politically, linguistically,
religiously, and legally. Both the Cyrillic
alphabet used by the Serbs and the Latin
alphabet used by the others were permitted.
A constitution was to be drafted after the
war, providing for both universal male
suffrage and secret ballot.
The new pact enabled the many south Slavic
parties to present a united front to the Western
powers, forestalling any territorial ambitions
by Italy. On December 1, 1918, the Kingdom
of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes (renamed Yugoslavia in 1929) came into being.
A. J. L. Waskey
See also: Dobro Pole, Battle of, 1918; Macedonian Front, 19161918; Serbia in World
War I

Further Reading
Bannan, Alfred J., and Achilles Edelenyi.
Documentary History of Eastern Europe.
New York: Twayne, 1970.
Djokic, Dejan. Yugoslavism: Histories of a
Failed Idea, 19181992. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 2003.
Hudson, Kate. Breaking the South Slav
Dream: The Rise and Fall of Yugoslavia.
Sterling, VA: Pluto Press, 2003.

Corfu Incident, 1923


The Corfu Incident was a crisis between
Greece and Italy in 1923 that developed
after unknown assailants killed three Italian
army officers, sent to settle a boundary dispute between Greece and Albania, and their
Albanian interpreter in northern Greece
near the Albanian border.
The Treaty of London, ending the First
Balkan War on May 30, 1913, made Albania
an independent state, and an International

Boundary Commission, created by the London Conference of Ambassadors, established its borders with Greece, Serbia, and
Montenegro in early 1914. During World
War I, Italian and Serbian forces occupied
the country. In January 1920, French, British, and Greek delegates at the Paris Peace
Conference developed a plan to partition
Albania among newly established Yugoslavia, Italy, and Greece to end the conflict
between Italy and Yugoslavia over Albania.
However, both the Albanians and the United
States objected, and, in March 1920, U.S.
president Woodrow Wilson officially recognized an independent Albania.
The official boundary between Albania
and Greece remained disputed. The two
nations submitted their dispute to the
Conference of Ambassadors, an intergovernmental agency, founded in 1919 by Britain, Italy, France, and Japan to resolve
international disputes. The League of
Nations authorized the conference to establish a commission to determine the boundary between the two countries. Several
countries, including Italy, provided small
military detachments to help the commission conduct the survey. General Enrico
Tellini (18711923) of the Italian army was
selected to head the commission.
From the beginning, the Greek government and the commission were at odds
with each other. The Greek delegate eventually accused Tellini of favoring Albanias
claims. Then, on August 27, 1923, unknown
assailants murdered Tellini and three of his
assistantsMajor Luigi Corti, Lieutenant
Luigi Bonacini, and their Albanian interpreternear the Greek town of Ioannina
near the Greek-Albanian border. Some sources attributed the attack to Greek nationalists, but the Greek government officially
stated that Albanian bandits had killed the
men even though they had not been robbed.

Cretan Crisis, 1896

On August 29, 1923, the Italian government issued an ultimatum to Greece in


which it demanded 50 million lire in reparations and the execution of the killers. However, the Greek government could not
identify the killers and refused to pay the
indemnity. Benito Mussolini, the Fascist
leader of Italy, then ordered Italian military
forces to bombard and occupy Corfu, a
Greek island that occupied a strategic position off the very southern coast of Albania
at the entrance to the Adriatic Sea. The Italian military action on August 31, 1923,
killed at least 15 civilians.
Greece now appealed to the League of
Nations, which condemned the Italian attack
and occupation. The Conference of Ambassadors mediated the dispute, and Italy and
Greece agreed to accept its decision. The
conference ordered Greece to apologize
and pay reparations to Italy, which the
Greek government did. In exchange, the
Italian forces would leave Corfu, which
they did on September 27, 1923.
Robert B. Kane
See also: Corfu Channel Incident, 1946

Further Reading
Barros, John. The Corfu Incident of 1923: Mussolini and the League of Nations. Princeton,
NJ: Princeton University Press, 1965.
Brecher, Michael, and Jonathan Wilkenfeld. A
Study of Crisis. Ann Arbor: University of
Michigan Press, 1997.
Costa, Nicolas J. Shattered Illusions: Albania,
Greece and Yugoslavia. Boulder, CO: East
European Monographs, 1998.
Massock, Richard G. Italy from Within. New
York: Macmillan, 1943.

Cretan Crisis, 1896


In 1896, a crisis on the Greek island of Crete
led to the independence of Crete and then its

eventual union with Greece. The history of


Crete, the largest and most populous of the
Greek islands, goes back to the Minoan civilization (c. 27001420 BC), regarded as the
earliest recorded civilization in Europe.
Over time, Mycenae, Rome, the Byzantine
Empire, Arabs, Venice, and, since 1669, the
Ottoman Empire had ruled the island.
Christian Cretans joined the Greek War of
Independence of 1821, but the Ottomans
reconquered the island by 1828. Crete was
not included in the Greek state established
by the London Protocol of 1830. The Ottoman sultan ceded the island to Muhammad
Ali of Egypt, but the 1840 Convention of
London returned Crete to the Ottomans.
The Cretans revolted against Ottoman
rule in 1841, 1858, and 1866. These successive rebellions gained the Christian Cretans
some privileges, such as the right to bear
arms, equality of Christian and Muslim
worship, Christian councils of elders with
jurisdiction over education and customary
and family law, and, after the 1866 revolt,
control of local administration. Despite
these concessions, the Christian Cretans
wanted to ultimately unite with Greece.
In the summer of 1878, the Cretans
rebelled again. This time, the British intervened and converted the 18671868 Organic
Law into the Pact of Halepa. According to
this agreement, Crete became a semiindependent parliamentary state, governed
by a Christian Ottoman governor, within
the Ottoman Empire.
In 1889, disputes between the liberals and
conservatives in the Cretan parliament led to
another revolt and the abrogation of the Pact
of Halepa. Ottoman sultan Abdulhamid IIs
(18421918) government sent troops to the
island and used the insurgency as a pretext
to establish martial law. In September 1895,
the Cretans revolted again, during which
they massacred a number of Muslims. In

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80

Crete, Battle of, 1941

March 1896, the sultan replaced the Christian governor with a Muslim. By the
summer of 1896, the Ottoman forces had
lost military control of most of the island.
In November 1896, Greece dispatched
troops to the island to help the Cretans.
After a new Cretan insurrection began in
early 1897, the Ottoman Empire declared
war on Greece in April 1897 and defeated
the Greek forces in Crete. Britain, France,
Italy, and Russia now intervened and forced
the sultan to withdraw his troops. The four
powers established a committee of four admirals to govern the island until Prince George
of Greece arrived on December 9, 1898, to
govern the island as an autonomous state
within the Ottoman Empire. Greek-speaking
Muslims began leaving the island. In 1908,
the Cretan deputies declared union with
Greece, an act formally recognized internationally in the 1913 Treaty of London.
Robert B. Kane
See also: Abdulhamid II (18421918); GrecoOttoman War, 1897; Greek War of Independence, 18211832

Further Reading
Georgios, Prince of Greece. The Cretan
Drama: The Life and Memoirs of Prince
George of Greece, High Commissioner in
Crete (18981906). Edited by A. A. Pallis.
New York: R. Speller, 1959.
Koliopoulos, John S., and Thanos M. Veremis.
Greece: The Modern Sequel, from 1831 to
the Present. New York: New York University Press, 2002.
Woodhouse, C. M. Modern Greece: A Short
History. 5th ed. London: Faber and Faber,
1991.

Crete, Battle of, 1941


The Germans had employed small airborne forces with spectacular success in

May 1940 in order to secure key bridges in


their invasion of the Netherlands and Belgium. The assault on Belgium in particular
provided a spectacular example of what the
new tactics of vertical envelopment might
accomplish when German paratroopers captured two key bridges over the Albert Canal
as well as the formidable bastion of Fortress
Eben Emael. German chancellor Adolf
Hitler developed the plan, which his field
commanders had greeted with considerable
skepticism.
The Germans sent a force of just 78 men
against Eben Emael with its 1,200-man
garrison. Landing directly on top of the fort
in gliders, the Germans employed 56 hollowcharge explosives to blow up its armored turrets and casemates. The tiny attacking force
secured its objective in only 28 hours. The
vital bridges at Veldwezelt and Vrownhoven
were also taken by coup de main, all of
which allowed the German ground forces to
move forward.
The first large-scale invasion by airborne
forces in history, however, occurred a year
later on the island of Crete. Beginning in
late 1940, Hitler acted in the Balkans to
counter Soviet moves there and to shore up
his southern flank before invading the Soviet
Union. In November 1940, he forced Hungary and Romania to join the Axis and
accept German troops. Bulgaria followed
suit in March 1941, and in April, the
Germans conquered Yugoslavia.
German troops also came to the aid of the
hard-pressed Italians in Greece. The Greeks
had the bulk of their divisions fighting the
Italians in Albania and had only three divisions and border forces in Macedonia,
where the Germans attacked. The British
Expeditionary Force (BEF) sent to Greece
was unprepared to deal with German armor
and the Luftwaffe, and during April 2630,
the BEF was precipitously evacuated from

Crete, Battle of, 1941

Greece. Many of the 43,000 British troops


taken off were landed on Crete. British
naval units were savaged by the Luftwaffe.
The Royal Navy lost 26 vessels, including
two destroyers, to German air attack, and
many other ships were badly damaged.
In May 1941, the Germans invaded Crete.
This operation, dubbed Merkur (mercury),
was conceived and planned by the head of
German paratroopers, Generalleutnant Kurt
Student (18901978). He saw it as the forerunner of other, more ambitious airborne operations against the island of Malta or even Suez.
Hitler saw it only as a cover for his planned
invasion of the Soviet Union, to secure the
German southern flank against British air
assault and protect the vital Romanian oil fields
at Ploesti. The invasion would be conducted by
parachutists and mountain troops brought in by
transport aircraft. British prime minister
Winston Churchills decision to try to hold
Crete, unprepared and bereft of Royal Air
Force (RAF) fighter support, ignored reality.
Major General Bernard Freyberg (1889
1963) commanded British forces on Crete,
with a corps centered on the Second New
Zealand Division. Ultra intercepts provided
Freyberg with advance knowledge of
German intentions and identified the
German drop zones and targeted airfields.
Ironically, the intercepts actually also hampered Freybergs dispositions because they
revealed that the Germans were sending a
seaborne force as well. The latter turned
out to be only a small-scale operation easily
blunted at sea, but the threat led Freyberg to
divert some of his scant resources from the
three airfields to the coast, which probably
cost him the battle. Freyberg also made a
major blunder in not releasing stocks of
weapons and not forming a Cretan home
guard before the invasion.
Merkur began on May 20. The Germans
barely managed to secure one airfield, at

Malerne. This was sufficient, for they were


then able to bring in mountain troops by
transport aircraft and to expand the perimeter. The Luftwaffe was able to hit Crete
and the Royal Navy units offshore with
impunity. The British withdrew to the coast
on May 28. Thus, in little more than a
week of fighting, the British were forced
into another evacuation. The few cutoff elements that remained were forced to surrender on May 31.
British and British Empire forces sustained
3,479 casualties (1,742 dead) and 11,835 prisoners. The Cretans also paid a heavy price.
They fought the Germans with what little
means they had and suffered savage reprisals
both in the battle and during the subsequent
occupation. The Germans sustained 6,700
casualties (3,300 dead) and 200 transport aircraft destroyed. Although there were concerns
in the Luftwaffe that codes might have been
broken, nothing was done.
Hitler was furious at the heavy German
losses and removed Student from command
during the battle. Never again did Hitler
employ paratroops in airborne assault in
significant number. From that point on,
Students men were used mainly as elite
infantry. Ironically, the Allies now embraced
paratroop operations.
The Battle for Crete also demonstrated
that warships without fighter support were
defenseless against attacking aircraft. British admiral Andrew Cunninghams Mediterranean Command smashed the German
amphibious operation of May 2123 sent to
reinforce the airborne troops on Crete, sinking a number of the small craft shuttling
troops and killing several hundred Germans.
But the Luftwaffe then mauled the Royal
Navy ships, sinking three cruisers and six
destroyers; six other ships, including two
battleships and an aircraft carrier, were
heavily damaged. More than 1,800 British

81

82

Crimean War, Balkan Operations

sailors died. Churchill ignored this lesson,


which would cost the Royal Navy two
capital ships in the South China Sea in
December 1941. Hitlers aggressive Balkan
moves barred Soviet expansion in the region
and secured protection against possible British air attack from the south. These goals
accomplished, he was ready to move against
the Soviet Union.
Spencer C. Tucker
See also: Germany in the Balkans during
World War II; Greece, Invasion of, 1941;
Greece in World War II

Further Reading
Kiriakopoulos, G. C. The Nazi Occupation of
Crete, 19411945. Westport, CT: Praeger,
1995.
MacDonald, Cullum. The Lost Battle: Crete
1941. New York: Free Press, 1993.
Pack, S. W. C. The Battle for Crete. London:
Ian Allan, 1973.
Thomas, David. Nazi Victory: Crete 1941.
New York: Stein and Day, 1973.

Crimean War, Balkan


Operations
The Russian General Staff prepared and recommended bold plans immediately before
the political crisis which led to war. However, Czar Nicholas I (17961855) gave
approval to the safest alternative, the occupation of the Principalities (Moldavia and
Wallachia) and being ready to launch attacks
on the Caucasian front. The main aim was a
political push to force the Ottomans to
accept Russian demands. Nicholas ordered
his commanders to begin the invasion of
the Principalities on May 28, 1853, which
was duly carried out after a month long concentration with the crossing of the Pruth
(Prut) River on July 3.

The Ottoman war council accepted a strategic plan in which the Balkan front would
remain in an active defense around the
Danube River, conducting only limited
attacks and harassment raids, while the Caucasian front would launch attacks deep into
Russian territory and try to capture dominant ground blocking Russian approach
roads while keeping the fortresses secure.
mer Lutfu
A renegade Habsburg officer, O
Pasha (Omar Latas; 18061871), was
chosen to defend the Danubean region.
While the ill-equipped and poorly led Ottoman Army of the Caucasus suffered a series
of blunders and defeats, the Army of the
mer
Danube under the able command of O
Pasha launched medium-sized surprise
attacks to Kalafat and Oltenitsa within
Wallachia with remarkable efficiency. The
Russian commander in chief, Prince Mikhail
Gorchakov (17921861), ordered his local
commanders to attack decisively to the
recent Ottoman gains. Ottoman troops beat
the overconfident Russian attacks and
inflicted heavy casualties.
The arrival of the first group of allied soldiers at Gallipoli and Constantinople forced
the Russians to change their strategic plans.
The main idea was now to capture Edirne
before the allied troops could come into
action. The initial part of the plan was carried out easily by occupying the lightly
defended Dobrudja. However, the second
part of the plan, the capture of Silistra,
turned out to be impossible, even though
the expected allied units failed to arrive on
time.
The Russian attacks on Silistra started on
May 16, 1854. The victorious commander
of the previous war, Count Ivan Paskievitch
(17821856), had little regard for the Ottoman military, and his faulty leadership
negated the advantages of the Russians.
The defenders of Silistra pushed back

Croat Forces, 19911995

three major assaults. The massive toll of


casualties and allied concentration in Varna
harbor forced the tactical commander,
Prince Alexander Gorchakov (17981883),
to abandon the siege and retreat on June 21.
A hasty Ottoman attack against the Russian
garrison in Giorgio speeded up the withdrawal and the entire Danube basin, except
a portion of Dobrudja, was evacuated by
the Russians. A Habsburg memorandum to
Russia effectively finished military operations in the Balkans and the Russian army
of occupation pulled back its last unit in
mid-August.
Mesut Uyar
See also: Dobrudja; Russo-Ottoman War,
18771878

Further Reading
Baumgart, Winifred. The Crimean War 1853
1856. London: Arnold Pub., 1999.
Dodd, George. Pictorial History of the Russian
War. London: W&R Chambers, 1856.
Gurel, A. Tevfik. 18531855 Turk-Rus ve Muttefiklerin Krm Savas . Istanbul: Askeri
Matbaa, 1935.

Croat Forces, 19911995


Formally known as the National Guard
Corps (Zbor narodne garde, or ZNG) and
later as simply the Croatian army (Hrvatska
vojska, or HV), these were forces loyal to
the government of Croatia who fought in
the war for Croatias independence from
Yugoslavia. Croat forces may also include
forces fighting on behalf of Croats during
the Croat-Bosniak conflict in Bosnia.
The war in Croatia began on March 31,
1991, and officially continued until the
Dayton Peace Agreement was signed on
November 21, 1995. In the earliest days of
the conflict, combatants fighting on behalf

of Croatia were largely Croatian police officers. As the conflict escalated, the ZNG was
officially created from 1,000 special police
officers and 9,000 volunteers on April 12,
1991, by Croatian president Franjo
Tudjman. The first brigade was formed on
May 1, 1991. Additional volunteers joined
the ZNG, and on June 15, 1991, Tudjman
appointed Staff General Martin S pegelj
(19272014) to command the forces. By
August 1991, Croat forces in Croatia had
grown to 60,000 members and four brigades.
Croatia was the second-most populous
Yugoslav republic, and of approximately
4.7 million people, 78 percent were Croats,
12 percent were Croatian Serbs, and 10 percent were of other ethnicities. After the
Croat nationalist Tudjman was elected in
1990, Croatian Serbs in the Kraijina region
of Croatia began to agitate for autonomy,
declaring an independent Republic of Serbian Krajina (RSK). After a violent clash at
the Plitvice Lakes National Park on
March 31, 1991, the Yugoslav Peoples
Army (JNA) was sent to intervene in
Croatia. The JNAs presence in Croatia significantly increased as the situation degenerated into war, and the JNA was vastly better
armed than the opposing Croat forces. To
remedy this imbalance, S pegelj led Croat
forces in the Battle of the Barracks between
September and December 1991, resulting
in the successful capture of heavy arms
from JNA barracks throughout Croatia.
By December 31, 1991, the Croat forces
included 230,000 members falling into 60
brigades. Combat brigades ranged in size
from 500 to 2,500 men. On January 2,
1992, the UN-brokered Sarajevo Agreement
ended the first phase of the war. Ethnic
cleansing and the detention of prisoners in
camps continued on both sides through
1992, and full-scale fighting resumed
on January 22, 1993, with the Croat-led

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Croat War, 19911995

Operation Maslenica. The final major battle


of the war in Croatia was Operation Storm,
August 47, 1995, in which 130,000 ZNG/
HV personnel decisively defeated the JNA
in the RSK, regaining nearly 4,000 square
miles of territory under the command of
Major General Ante Gotovina (1955).
Meanwhile, in neighboring Bosnia, Croat
forces organized under the Croatian Defense
Council (Hrvatsko vijece obrane, or HVO)
to defend Croat interests in the CroatBosniak conflict. The Croat-Bosniak conflict began on June 19, 1992, and continued
through February 23, 1994, officially ending
with the adoption of the Washington Agreement on March 18, 1994. During the conflict, the HVO grew to include 45,000
personnel. By 1994, in addition to HVO personnel, 3,0005,000 ZNG/HV troops were
fighting on behalf of Croats in Bosnia.
Mary Kate Schneider
See also: Croat War, 19911995; Yugoslav
Wars, 19911995; Yugoslav Wars, 1991
1995, Causes; Yugoslav Wars, 19911995,
Consequences

Further Reading
Magas , Branka, and Ivo Z anic . The War in
Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina 1991
1995. New York: Routledge, 2001.
Thomas, Nigel. The Yugoslav Wars (1): Slovenia and Croatia 19911995. Oxford:
Osprey Publishing, 2006.
U.S. Central Intelligence Agency. Office of Russian and European Analysis. Balkan Battlefields: A Military History of the Yugoslav
Conflict 19911995. 2 vols. Washington
DC: Central Intelligence Agency, 2002.

Croat War, 19911995


The Croat War of 19911995 was a major
component of the Yugoslav Wars, in which
the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia

collapsed into its national components.


Throughout this time, the events in Croatia
were closely interconnected with those in
Bosnia. The origins of this conflict date
back to World War II, when the Croatian
fascist Ustasa regime relentlessly persecuted
its Serbian minority. The Serbs, who had
lived in the northwestern (Krajina) and
eastern (Slavonia) regions of Croatia since
the end of the seventeenth century,
responded by joining Cetnik and Partisan
units. A bloody conflict ensued throughout
the region. After the Partisan victory in
1945, the regime of Josip Broz Tito (1892
1980) established a federal republic and
muted nationalist sentiments. After Titos
death, the concept of federal Communism
declined, and nationalism returned to the
Yugoslav republics.
The emergence of Franjo Tudjman
(19221999) as president of Croatia in
April 1990 brought events in Croatia to the
point of war. Tudjman was a former Partisan
fighter who had become a strong Croatian
nationalist during the later years of the Tito
regime. His government promoted a strong
nationalist position, adopting symbols from
the Ustas a past such as the red-and-white
checkerboard (sahovnica) and the kuna currency. These and other Croatian nationalist
actions, such as the overt use of the Latin
alphabet, renaming streets, and purging
Serbs from state jobs, especially in the
police, alarmed the Serbian minority, which
constituted around 12 percent of the population. The Serbian population in Krajina and
Slavonia received encouragement and
support from the Serbian nationalist
government of Slobodan Milosevic (1941
2006) in Belgrade. After a positive referendum in May 1991, Croatia declared
independence on June 25. The new state
was unprepared to defend its new status.
By this time, the Serbian communities had

Croat War, 19911995

A Croatian army tank coming from the front line arrives while Croatian troops leave the
recaptured town of Knin, August 10, 1995. Croatian troops were concentrating in the
capital of the self-declared Serb Republic Krajina, recently retaken by Croatian
government forces. (AP Photo/Darko Bandic)

already begun to assert their own authority


separate from Zagreb and to arm themselves
with the aid of the Yugoslav Peoples Army
(JNA). Like all other Yugoslavs, they had
trained in the territorial defense units (TO).
They maintained their right to remain in
Yugoslavia. The Croats themselves failed to
build an effective fighting force based
upon the TO. The JNA took control of
TO resources in Croatia. The Croatian
government was forced to rely upon the
police.
Throughout the spring of 1991, the Serbs
erected barricades in Krajina. Fighting
between the Croats and Serbs began in the
summer when the inadequately armed
Croatian police attempted to enforce the
authority of the Zagreb government in the
Serbian regions. The ambush and killing
of 12 Croatian policemen at the village of
Borovo Selo on May 1, 1991, marks the
beginning of the Croatian War. Skirmishing

continued in the Krajina region throughout


the summer. By July, the Serbs had eliminated Croatian government units there and
had established a capital at Knin. By September, the Serbs had expanded their areas
of contrail into northern Dalmatia.
The largest arena of combat between Croatian government forces and Serbian militias
occurred around the Slavonian city of Vukovar. The city itself, like much of Slavonia,
had a mixed population including Croats
and Serbs as well as Czechs, Hungarians,
Slovaks, Ukrainians, and others left over
from the Habsburg era. In August 1991, the
JNA, by then largely a Serbian force, joined
Serbian militias to bring the Zagreb
governmentheld town under siege. The
Croatian forces within the city numbered
only around 1,800 men. They were heavily
outgunned and outnumbered by the surrounding Serbs. The Croatian government
lacked the military resources to relieve the

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city. The besiegers preferred to use artillery


rather than a direct infantry assault to overcome the defenders. At first the JNA and
the militias failed to coordinate their efforts.
Finally on November 18, the Serbs overcame the exhausted defenders and took the
city. Many civilians died during the siege.
The Serbian militias massacred many of the
civilian and military wounded in the city
hospital. Some Serbian commanders were
later indicted for war crimes for this
incident.
During the fall of 1991, fighting also
occurred around the historic city of Dubrovnik. The JNA, assisted by some Montenegrin TO forces, surrounded the city by
the end of October. JNA artillery caused
much damage in the old city. JNA troops
engaged in widespread looting, especially
in the tourist hotels. Pleasure craft in the harbors also suffered damage from JNA artillery. The massacre at Vukovar and the
destruction around Dubrovnik caused much
outrage and considerable damage to the
Serbian cause throughout Europe and the
United States.
The fighting in Croatia came to a temporary end due to the efforts of the United
Nations. Cyrus Vance (19172002), an
American diplomat acting on behalf of the
UN, negotiated an armistice signed between
the Croats and Serbs in Sarajevo on January 2, 1992. An initial effort by the European Community (EC) in the fall of 1991
to end the fighting failed. The Vance effort
established a United Nations Protection
Force (UNPROFOR) in Croatia to monitor
the armistice and to disarm the two sides.
The UNPROFOR arrived in March 1992
and established itself between Croats and
Serbs. The Croats accepted the armistice
and the de facto loss of around one-third of
their territory because they lacked the military ability to defeat the Serbs. The Serbs

accepted the armistice because they had


realized their main objective, the establishment of a Serbian entity connected to those
in Bosnia and Serbia. The looming crisis in
Bosnia also provided incentive for both
sides to reach some kind of temporary
accommodation.
When war in Bosnia erupted in April
1992, the armistice in Croatia held. The
Zagreb government utilized the next two
years to intervene in Bosnia. It also made
considerable efforts to acquire arms and
training for its forces. It had not abandoned
the concept of sovereignty over all of Croatia. During this time, the Croats also undertook several limited operations against the
Serbs in the Krajina region. In January 1993
they seized the Maslenica Bridge near
Zadar. This reestablished the land route
between northern and southern Croatia. In
September 1993, they attacked some Serbian artillery positions near Gospic. After
some fighting, UNPROFOR took over the
positions and the armistice held. This was a
gain for Croatia.
Through strenuous effort, the Croats
obtained mainly former Soviet Bloc military
equipment from various sources that would
enable them to undertake rapid offensive
action. Especially important to the Croat
plans was the acquisition of 24 MiG fighter
bombers, 30 Mi-8 transport helicopters, and
8 Mi-24 helicopter gunships. They intended
to carry out a blitzkrieg strategy.
By 1995, the Croatian government forces
had armed and trained to the point that they
were prepared to attack the Serbs and establish government control over all Croatia. In
March 1995, some fighting occurred around
Livno. The initial phase of the planned
Croat offensive, however, began on May 1
when Croat forces quickly overran the Serbian salient of western Slavonia. The operation ended the next day with the capture of

Cypriot Civil War, 1963

the salient and the surrender of the Serbian


units there.
The larger Croat effort began in the
summer. On July 25, Croatian forces intervened in northwestern Bosnia to prevent
the loss of Bihac to the Serbs and their Bosnian ally Fikret Abdic (1939). After forcing the Serbs to withdrawal from Bihac, the
Croats then initiated Operation Storm
(Oluja) on August 4. This was directed at
the Serbian forces in Krajina. The Croat
offensive quickly overwhelmed the Serbian
defenders. Knin, the Krajina capital and
main Croat objective, fell on August 5.
These attacks occurred in conjunction with
an offensive mounted from Bihac by the
Bosnian army against the Bosnian Serb
forces. The JNA was unable to render any
significant assistance to the Serbs in Krajina
or in Bosnia. By August 8, the campaign had
ended. The remnants of the Serbian forces
together with most of the Serbian civilian
population began to evacuate into Bosnia
and on into Serbia. Three hundred years of
a Serbian presence in Krajina was over.
After the success of Operation Storm, the
Croats continued their cooperation with the
Bosnian government forces in Operation
Maestral, directed against the Bosnian
Serbs. This effort began on September 8
and continued through most of the month.
Operation Maestral, like Operation Storm,
benefited from NATOs Operation Deliberate Force, which was directed against the
Bosnian Serbs. It had begun on August 30
and lasted until September 20. The Croatian
army continued to fight in Bosnia in conjunction with Bosnian government forces
until the cease-fire on October 12. The Dayton Peace Accords established a settlement
that returned Vukovar and eastern Slavonia
to Croatia in 1997.
Although initially the Croatian army suffered from lack of heavy weapons and poor

organization, it was able to overcome


these deficiencies and ultimately achieve
its objective of establishing Croatian
government control over the entire country.
Praiseworthy as this effort was, the complicity of some members of the Croat forces in
war crimes cannot be overlooked. The
expulsion of the Serbs from Krajina remains
an overt example of ethnic cleansing.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Bihac ; JNA (Yugoslav Peoples
Army); Storm, Operation, 1995; Tudjman,
Franjo (19221999); UNPROFOR; Yugoslav
Wars, 19911995, Causes

Further Reading
Silber, Laura, and Allen Little. Yugoslavia: Death
of a Nation. New York: Penguin, 1998.
Thomas, N., and K. Mikulan, The Yugoslav
Wars (2), Bosnia, Kosovo and Macedonia
19922001. Botely, Oxford: Osprey, 2006.
U.S. Central Intelligence Agency. Balkan
Battlegrounds: A Military History of the
Yugoslav Conflict, 19901995. 2 vols.
Washington, DC: Central Intelligence
Agency, 20022003.

Cypriot Civil War, 1963


Cyprus negotiated independence from
British administration in 1960, but its early
constitution failed to strike a workable compromise between Greek majority and Turkish
minority interests. Just three years into its tenure as an independent republic, Cypriot civic
tension erupted into the Cypriot Civil War.
In November 1963, President Makarios III
(19131977), a Greek Cypriot and Orthodox
archbishop, proposed a set of constitutional
revisions. While Turkish Cypriot vice
president Fazil Kucuk (19061984) considered that plan, Turkey rejected it outright.
Amidst mounting tensions in the capital of
Nicosia, on December 21, Greek Cypriot

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88

Cyprus War, 1974

police intercepted a Turkish Cypriot couple


along the dividing line between the Greek
and Turkish quarters of the city (later called
the Green Line). Among the gathering
crowd, shots rang out and left the two Turkish
Cypriots dead. Spurred by the news, members
of underground organizations on both sides
entered into armed skirmishes. Kucuk and
Turkish Cypriot officials withdrew from the
government.
As fighting dwindled in the presence of
UN peacekeeping forces, many Turkish
Cypriots relocated from remote villages to
Nicosias heavily defended Turkish quarter.
In June 1964, the Cypriot House of Representatives (only representing Greek Cypriots)
established a National Guard to which men
aged 18 to 59 could be called for service.
The idea was to unify and discipline the
uncontrolled bands of Greek Cypriots roaming the countryside. President Makarios
invited back exiled Greek general Georgios
Grivas (18981974), a legendary freedom
fighter against the British, to lead the National
Guard. Turkish Cypriots viewed that action as
an attempt to upgrade the National Guard into
a Greek Cypriot army. In response, Turkey
began invasion preparations. A warning from
U.S. president Lyndon B. Johnson dissuaded
Prime Minister Ismet Inonu (18841973)
from invading the island, although shortly
thereafter, Turkish planes fired on Greek Cypriots who were sacking Turkish Cypriot villages.
In July, U.S. diplomat Dean Acheson
(18931971) met in Geneva with Greek and
Turkish representatives to hammer out a compromise: Greek Cypriots would get enosis
(union) with Greece, Greece would compensate Turkish Cypriots wishing to emigrate,
and Greece would hand over to Turkey the
Aegean island of Kastelorrizo. Makarios
rejected the Acheson Plan; he called its provision of Turkish Cypriot enclaves and a Turkish
sovereign military base a form of partition.

Grivas, responding to Turkeys air strikes,


led the National Guard in sacking two
Turkish Cypriot villages. Turkey massed
troops on its border with Greece and threatened invasion if Greek Cypriots did not
meet an ultimatum. In partial compliance,
Grivas resigned from the guard and
returned to Greece. Turkish troops did not
retreat, however. U.S. president Johnson,
again alerted to the now imminent possibility of two North Atlantic Treaty Organization nations going to war, sent Cyrus
Vance as special envoy to all three countries. In Ankara in November 1967, Vance
successfully negotiated for Greece and Turkey to remove simultaneously all troops
from Cyprus, except those permitted by
the 1960 treaties, and for Turkish troops to
withdraw from the Greek border. Fullscale war was averted and independence
reestablished. Makarios, reelected to office
in February 1968, chose not to dismantle
the National Guard. In 1974, it would rise
up against him in a coup that in the end
established partition.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Cyprus War, 1974

Further Reading
Clogg, Richard. A Concise History of Greece. New
York: Cambridge University Press, 2002.
Jacovides, Andreas J. The Cyprus Question: Its
Dimensions, Implications and Prospects for
a Solution. Washington, DC: Center for
Mediterranean Studies, 1980.
Veremis, Thanos, and Mark Dragoumis. Historical Dictionary of Greece. Metuchen,
NJ: Scarecrow Press, 1995.

Cyprus War, 1974


On July 15, 1974, disaffected Greek Cypriots who favored enosis (union with Greece)

Cyprus War, 1974

launched a coup against Cypriot leader and


archbishop Makarios III (19131977). He
was replaced by Nikos Sampson (1935
2001), a staunch proponent of enosis who
had the backing of Greeces military junta in
Athens. At the time, the island of Cyprus
was peopled by both Greeks and Turks, and
elements of each of those factions sought to
control the entire island for themselves. Turkey was outraged by the move and promptly
mobilized a force of some 40,000 troops,
which invaded northern Cyprus in the predawn hours of July 20, 1974 at Kyrenia
(Girne). At the time, Greek Cypriots could
count on only about 12,000 active-duty troops
and perhaps another 15,000 ill-trained and illequipped reservists. The Turkish troops had
little trouble seizing and holding about
3 percent of northern Cyprus within 48 hours.
The Turkish invasion precipitated a flurry
of international diplomacy, and late on
July 22, the UN Security Council managed
to broker a cease-fire. Meanwhile, because
of the ease with which the Turks had invaded
Cyprus, the Greek military government in
Athens fell on July 23. The following day, a
new Greek government under Constantine
Karamanlis (19071998) was formed, and he
sent delegates to a hastily arranged peace
conference in Geneva, Switzerland, which
occurred from July 25 to July 30. In the meantime, Karamanlis decided not to pursue any
additional direct military action in Cyprus
because Turkish forces were too numerous
and had already established a strong defensive
position in northern Cyprus.
The Greeks and the Turks were unwilling
to enter into serious negotiations, however,
and the Geneva talks ended in failure on
July 30. Turkey, realizing that it held the
upper hand, decided to launch a full-scale
military offensive from northern Cyprus on

August 14, with the goal of capturing and


holding some 40 percent of Cyprus (essentially all of the northern third of the island).
It accomplished this by August 16, with its
occupation extending as far south as Lourojina. The Turks disguised their July and
August offensives as peace operations.
As a result of the Turkish invasion and
occupation, perhaps as many as 200,000
Greeks living in northern Cyprus fled their
homes and became refugees in the south. It
is estimated that 638 Turkish troops died in
the fighting, with another 2,000 wounded.
Another 1,000 or so Turkish civilians were
killed or wounded. Cypriot Greeks, together
with Greek soldiers dispatched to the island,
suffered 4,5006,000 killed or wounded,
and 2,0003,000 more missing.
Meanwhile, the United Nations established a permanent cease-fire line, known
as the Green Line, which effectively divided
Cyprus into a Turkish-controlled northern
zone and a Greek-controlled southern zone.
With the establishment of the Turkish Federated State of Northern Cyprus in 1975
(which is not recognized by most of the
international community), some 60,000
Turks living in southern Cyprus migrated to
the Turkish-controlled northern zone that
same year. The Green Line continued to
exist as of this writing, and some 25,000
30,000 Turkish troops remained stationed
in the north. The brief war and its inconclusive aftermath have radically changed the
population distribution in Cyprus.
Whereas before 1974, Greeks and Turks
were relatively well distributed throughout
the island, Cyprus became almost completely bifurcated, with most Turks living
in the northern part, and Greeks in the
southern part. In May 2004, the two-thirds
of Cyprus controlled by the Greeks entered

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Cyprus War, 1974

the European Union as the Republic of


Cyprus. The Cypriot territory still controlled
by Turkey was not included in this move.
Paul G. Pierpaoli Jr.
See also: Cypriot Civil War, 1963

Further Reading
Crawshaw, Nancy. The Cyprus Revolt: An
Account of the Struggle for Union with

Greece. London: George Allen & Unwin,


1978.
Joseph, Joseph S. Cyprus: Ethnic Conflict and
International Politics: From Independence
to the Threshold of the European Union.
New York: St. Martins Press, 1997.

D
Dayton Peace Accords, 1995

of Bosnia-Herzegovina and the Republika


Srpska. Further requirements maintained
the capital city of Sarajevo, established a
three-part government, required democratic
elections, assured refugees right of return,
excluded war criminals from political life,
and mandated an international peacekeeping
force.
Following the agreement, the United
Nations established the UN International
Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia
(ICTY) to examine charges of ethnic cleansing and other war crimes. Peacekeeping
forces discovered mass graves located outside
the Bosnian city of Srebrenica, where a
reported 7,779 Bosniak males were killed by
Serbian forces in July 1995. The Serbian
siege and bombardment of the city of
Sarajevo, which lasted for nearly three years,
led to the deaths of thousands of Muslim
Bosniaks as well. As of March 2006, 161 people had been indicted for crimes related to the
Bosnian War by the ICTY.
Richard C. Hall

The Dayton Peace Accords brought temporary peace between the Bosnians, Croats,
and Serbs following the break-up of the former Yugoslavia. In November 1995, after
more than three years of war in Bosnia,
President Bill Clinton (1946) helped
the leaders of these states negotiate a
peace treaty. With estimates of 100,000 to
400,000 people dead and the country of Bosnia in ruins, the process of nation-building
under the auspices of the United Nations
and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization
(NATO) began. Since the creation of the
International Criminal Tribunal for the
Former Yugoslavia, 161 people have been
indicted on charges of ethnic cleansing, war
crimes, and other acts.
The Bosnian Waralso known as
the Balkan Warbegan on April 6, 1992.
Three political parties emerged from the
first Bosnian democratic election in 1990,
with each party representing a major ethnic
group. These parties, representing the
Bosniaks, Bosnian Serbs, and Bosnian
Croats, formed an uneasy coalition to maintain state unity. When Bosnia declared
independence in April 1992, the Yugoslav
Peoples Army (of Serbia) surrounded
Bosnia and began its military campaign.
Three years later, following involvement
by Croatian, Bosnian, and Serbian forces,
the three groups met with President Bill
Clinton in Dayton, Ohio, to reach a peace
agreement. The Dayton Peace Accords
divided Bosnia into the separate republics

See also: Bosnian War, 19921995; VanceOwen Plan, 1993; Yugoslav Wars, 1991
1995, Consequences

Further Reading
Cousens, Elizabeth M., and Charles K. Cater.
Toward Peace in Bosnia: Implementing the
Dayton Accords. Boulder, CO: Lynne Rienner Publishers, 2001.
Morton, Jeffrey S., et al. Reflections on the
Balkan Wars: Ten Years after the Break-up
of Yugoslavia. New York: Palgrave
Macmillan, 2004.

91

92

Dimitriev, Radko

Dimitriev, Radko (18591918)


Bulgarian general and diplomat and Russian
army general, Radko Ruskov Dimitriev was
born on September 24, 1859, in Gradets,
Bulgaria (then Ottoman Empire), Radko
Dimitriev participated in the April 1876
Bulgarian national uprising against the
Ottomans and served in the ensuing RussoOttoman War of 18771878 as a volunteer
with a Russian Cossack unit. After the war,
he was among the first graduates of the
Bulgarian Military Academy in Sofia and
later attended the Nikolaevski General Staff
Academy in St. Petersburg.
Dimitriev served in the Bulgarian-Serbian
War of 1885 as a staff officer in the Western
Corps and rose in the ranks of the Bulgarian
army, particularly distinguished by his proRussian perspective and charismatic personality. His short stature caused some observers to compare him to Napoleon. During
the First Balkan War of 19121913, he commanded the Bulgarian Third Army in its
descent upon eastern Thrace, achieving
important victories against the Ottomans at
Lozengrad and Lyule BurgasBuni Hisar.
He directed the combined Bulgarian First
and Third Armies during the Bulgarian
assault on the Chataldzha lines outside Constantinople in November 1912 that failed to
breach the Ottoman defensive positions.
Dimitriev commanded Bulgarian armies
during the catastrophic Second Balkan War
in 1913.
After the Second Balkan War, Dimitriev
became Bulgarian minister in St. Petersburg,
but in August 1914, he resigned this post to
accept a command in the Russian army. He
led the Russian Third Army against the
Austro-Hungarians into Galicia that autumn,
but his Third Army suffered a serious defeat
in the May 1915 German counterattack at

Gorlice-Tarnow. The initial German artillery


barrages decimated his soldiers, who had
failed to prepare secure positions. His army
also suffered heavy losses in the ensuing
retreat from Galicia, to the extent that the
Third Army ceased to be an effective force.
After this disaster, Dimitriev was relieved
of command of the Third Army. A major
reason for his relief was his failure to
prepare fortified positions, but he also
squabbled constantly with his superiors at
the Southwestern Front headquarters and at
Stavka, insisting on the delivery of additional munitions for his troops and, after
the initial German attack, demanding an
immediate withdrawal of his forces.
Dimitriev later served on the Northern
Front, commanding the II and VII Siberian
Corps and afterward the Russian Twelfth
Army. He retired after the March 1917 revolution but remained in Russia. During the
Russian Civil War, Red forces shot Dimitriev along with some 100 other officers as
hostages at Rostov-on-Don on October 18,
1918. Dimitriev was an energetic and charismatic leader who commanded the loyalty of
his subordinates and respect of his peers but
whose victories in the Balkan Wars and
World War I were overshadowed by his
defeats.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Chataldzha, Battle of, 1912; Lyule
BurgasBuni Hisar, Battle of, 1912.

Further Reading
Azmanov, Dimitur. Bulgarski visshi, Voenachalnitsi prez Balkanskata i Purvata
svetovna voina. Sofia: Voinno izdatelstvo,
2000.
Rutherford, Ward. The Russian Army in World
War I. London: Cremonesi, 1975.
Stone, Norman. The Eastern Front, 1914
1917. New York: Scribner, 1975.

Dimitrijevic, Dragutin

Dimitrijevic, Dragutin
(18761917)
Born in Belgrade on August 19, 1876, Serbian army colonel Dragutin Dimitrijevic
attended the lycee and the military academy
in Belgrade. A brilliant and energetic student, he was nicknamed Apis after the
ancient Egyptian bull-headed god, and the
name stuck. Although he quickly moved
into a position in the Serbian General
Staff, Dimitrijevic above all remained an
ardent patriot, dedicated to the creation of a
Greater Serbia by any means possible,
including the use of espionage, conspiracy,
and assassination.
In 1901, Dimitrijevic helped organize the
first failed attempt to murder the unpopular
and pro-Austrian King Alexander Obrenovic
(18761903). Dimitrijevic was successful in
1903, when the conspiracy succeeded in
killing Alexander, his wife, and three others.
The new king, Peter I Karageorgevic (1844
1921), was grateful for his services, and
Dimitrijevic advanced rapidly in the Serbian
military. Captain Dimitrijevic spent a decade
in various command and staff posts, broken
by language study in Berlin during 1906
1907. From 1910, he taught tactics at the
Belgrade Military Academy, where he
became a staunch advocate of reform.
In 1911, Dimitrijevic , who supported
formation of a Greater Serb state organized
under the Karageorgevic dynasty, helped
found Ujedinjenje ili Smrt (Unification or
Death), commonly known as the Black
Hand. This tightly organized, conspiratorial
network was established under the larger
and public patriotic society Narodna
Odbrana (National Defense). The Black
Hand conducted subversive activities in
Bosnia and Macedonia and even attempted

to assassinate Austrian emperor Franz


Joseph in 1911.
Prior to the First Balkan War, Apis carried
out a reconnaissance mission behind Turkish lines in Albania. He contracted an illness
while on this mission and took no part in the
fighting. In mid-1913, Colonel Dimitrijevic
became chief of the Intelligence Department
in the Serbian General Staff. In this position
he actively plotted political assassinations
to secure his goal of a Greater Serbia.
Although the Black Hand gained influence
in Serbian domestic politics, relations with
the civilian administration cooled by 1914,
particularly after the failed attempt to kill
the Bosnian governor, Austro-Hungarian
army general Oskar Potiorek (18531933),
that January.
In the spring of 1914, Dimitrijevic instigated a plot against Archduke Franz Ferdinand, possibly fearing that the archdukes
proposed reforms would weaken Slavic
unrest in Bosnia. Three young Bosnian
Serbs were recruited in Belgrade, trained
and supplied in Serbia, and sent to Sarajevo.
They succeeded in shooting and killing the
archduke and his wife on June 28, 1914.
This event brought on the crisis that led
directly to the Great War.
In late 1916, with the Serbian government
in exile, Prime Minister Nicola Pas ic
decided to destroy the Black Hand, probably
to remove independent factions within the
army. On December 15, Dimitrijevic and
his principal partisans were arrested in
Salonika. They were brought before a military tribunal in May 1917. Condemned to
death on sham charges, Dimitrijevic was
shot on June 26, 1917.
Timothy L. Francis
See also: Black Hand; Sarajevo Assassination,
1914; Serbia in World War I

93

94

Djilas, Milovan

Further Reading
Albertini, Luigi. The Origins of the War of
1914. 3 vols. London: Oxford University
Press, 19521957.
Cassels, Lavender. The Archduke and the
Assassin: Sarajevo, June 28th 1914. New
York: Stein and Day, 1985.
Remak, Joachim. Sarajevo: The Story of a
Political Murder. New York: Criterion,
1959.

Djilas, Milovan (19111995)


Milovan Djilas was a Yugoslav Communist
revolutionary, advisor to Josip Broz Tito,
Yugoslavias press czar in charge of
propaganda, writer, and noted dissident.
Born to a Serbian family on June 12, 1911
in Podbisce in Montenegro, Djilas studied
law and philosophy at the University of
Belgrade, became a Communist student
leader, and was imprisoned during 1933
1935 for his radical politics. In 1937, he
met Josip Broz Tito (18921980), then
head of the illegal Communist Party, and
soon became his chief assistant and close
friend. Tito appointed Djilas to the Yugoslav
Communist Party Politburo in 1940.
During World War II, Djilas played a
major role in organizing the Partisan Uprising and took an active leadership role in the
resistance to the German army occupation.
In 1944, he traveled to Moscow, where he
held the first of a series of meetings with
Soviet dictator Josef Stalin (18791953).
Djilas later described these in his dissident
manifesto Conversations with Stalin (1962).
In Yugoslavias postwar government,
Djilas became a cabinet minister in charge
of propaganda and was noted for his ruthless
imposition of cultural subjugation. He
greatly influenced Titos 1948 decision to
break with the Soviet Union in order to pursue an independent, socialist path. But by

the end of the decade, Djilas had grave


doubts about both Stalinism and Yugoslavias ability to implement self-managed
socialism.
Because of his calls for increased liberalization and his criticism of the Communist
Party that were published in the party daily
Borba in April 1954, Djilas was ousted from
the party and received an 18-month suspended sentence. However, when his article
The Storm in Eastern Europe appeared in
a major American magazine supporting the
1956 Hungarian Revolution, he was imprisoned for three years. In 1957, his prison sentence was increased to seven years after the
manuscript of his book The New Class was
smuggled to the West and published. This
work was the first authentic exposure of
Eastern bloc Communists as a new elite
dedicated to self-aggrandizement and power
and therefore not so different from the capitalists they had replaced. Djilas was released in
1961 but imprisoned again in 1962 after the
publication of the disdainful Conversations
with Stalin. He received a pardon in 1966,
was allowed to travel, and held a visiting professorship at Princeton University in 1968.
Djilas renounced communism entirely in
The Imperfect Society, published in 1969,
and became a hero among Communist dissidents. During the 1990s, he opposed the
breakup of Yugoslavia and decried the fervent nationalism that precipitated the bloody
Balkan conflicts that soon ensued. Djilas
died in Belgrade on April 20, 1995.
Josip Mocnik
See also: Partisans, Yugoslavia; Tito, Josip
Broz (18921980); Yugoslav-Soviet Split

Further Reading
Djilas, Milova n. Conversations with Stalin.
Translated by Michael B. Petrovich. New
York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1962.

Dobro Pole, Battle of, 1918


Djilas, Milova n. Rise and Fall. New York:
Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1985.
Sulzberger, C. L. Paradise Regained: Memoir
of a Rebel. New York: Praeger, 1989.

Dobro Pole, Battle of, 1918


The battle of Dobro Pole from September 14
to 16, 1918, was the decisive battle on the
Macedonian Front. After their 1916 offensive, the Bulgarians lacked the strength to
undertake further attacks on Entente positions in Macedonia. They strengthened
their defenses with new trenches, barbed
wire, and strong points, and waited for their
German allies to win the war on other fronts.
Dobro Pole was a fortified line along a limestone ridge along the prewar Greek-Serbian
border. The name means Good Field in
Slavic. This referred to the relatively level
region behind the Bulgarian positions.
Through 1917 and 1918, the strength and
morale of the Bulgarian army had eroded as
the Germans transferred their forces from
Macedonia to the Western Front and as the
quantity and quality of Bulgarian provisions
and war materials declined. By the summer
of 1918, all that remained of the German presence on the Macedonian Front was the command and staff structure of the German
Eleventh Army, which by this time had
mainly Bulgarian troops, some specialists,
and some largely immobile heavy artillery.
Meanwhile, the Entente forces based on
Salonika had increased. French Colonial,
Greek, Italian, and Serbian soldiers supplemented the original British and French contingents on the Macedonian Front while
tons of supplies fortified the resolve and
filled the stomachs of the Entente men.
After two years of relative inertia on the
Macedonian Front, Entente forces, prodded
by Serbs eager to return to their homeland,

sought a decisive action. The realization


that the seizure of the Dobro Pole positions
could open up the entire line and bring total
victory caused the Entente to plan for battle.
On September 14, the Entente began a
heavy artillery attack on the Dobro Pole
positions. The next morning French, French
Colonial, and Serbian troops began their
assaults. After two days of heavy fighting,
the Entente forces broke through the Bulgarian positions. The absence of Bulgarian
commander in chief Nikola Zhekov (1865
1949), who was in Vienna for medical treatment, hindered the Bulgarian response to
this crisis. Two Bulgarian divisions collapsed, and the soldiers rejected attempts of
their officers to restore order. While some
went home, many surged toward Sofia to
punish those responsible for their years of
suffering. Meanwhile, a supplemental British and Greek attack launched on September 18 at Lake Doiran failed.
By September 21, Entente forces had
reached the Vardar River. This afforded them
a fairly easy route to the north. The breakthrough forced the Bulgarians to withdraw
their units west of Dobro Pole to avoid being
cut off by the Entente advance. With few Central Powers units available to reinforce the
retreating Bulgarians, and with discontent
growing in the Bulgarian ranks, the Bulgarian
government on September 26 decided to seek
a way out of the war. On September 29, the
Bulgarian delegation in Salonika signed an
armistice with the Entente. Bulgaria was the
last country to join the Central alliance, and
the first to leave it. In the aftermath of the
armistice, a combination of Bulgarian cadets
and Germans defeated the mutineers.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Bulgaria in World War I; Doiran,
Battles of, 19151918; Macedonian Front,
19161918; Zhekov, Nikola (18641949)

95

96

Dobrudja

Further Reading
Hall, Richard C. Balkan Breakthrough: The
Battle of Dobro Pole 1918. Bloomington:
Indiana University Press, 2010.
Palmer, Alan. The Gardeners of Salonika. New
York: Simon and Schuster, 1965.

Dobrudja
Dobrudja (Bulgarian: Dobrudzha) is a
Balkan territory located between the lower
Danube River and the Black Sea. Dobrudjas
9,000 square miles are today divided
between Romania and Bulgaria. In 1945,
the aggregate area held some 860,000 people. The population is principally Romanian
in the north and Bulgarian in the south, with
pockets of Turks and Tartars dispersed
throughout. The principal city of Dobrudja
is Constanta (population 79,000 in 1945),
Romanias principal port. Always of strategic importance, the area was in dispute
between the Byzantine and Bulgarian
Empires but fell to the Turks in 1411. It
remained part of the Ottoman Empire until
the Russo-Ottoman War of 18771878. The
Treaty of Berlin in 1878 assigned the bulk
of Dobrudja to the Kingdom of Romania
and a smaller southern section to the new
autonomous Principality of Bulgaria.
While Bulgaria was hard-pressed by the
Serbs during the Second Balkan War in
1912, Romania occupied the southern section to a line between Silistra and Balchik.
The Treaty of Bucharest in 1913 confirmed
Romanian control over all of Dobrudja, but
Bulgaria refused to reconcile itself to the
loss of the southern portion, the richest agricultural land of Bulgaria. When Romania
joined the Entente in 1916, Bulgaria, one of
the Central Powers, invaded Dobrudja with
the intention of regaining its lost territory.
The defeat of the Central Powers, however,

thwarted Bulgarian hopes, and Dobrudja


remained Romanian.
On September 7, 1940, Bulgaria, with the
backing of Nazi Germany, was able to
regain southern Dobrudja. The Germans
forced Romania to accept the Treaty of
Craiova but mandated an exchange of population. Some 110,000 Romanians were
forced to relocate from the south to the
north, and 62,000 Bulgarians were forced
to leave their homes in northern Dobrudja
and resettle in the south. Overall, Romania
lost 2,970 square miles and 875,000 people
of Dobrudja to Bulgaria.
Bulgaria, which had not declared war on or
participated in the invasion of the Soviet
Union, joined the Soviet military campaign
against Nazi Germany in the fall of 1944.
Although Bulgaria was not recognized as a
cobelligerent, Soviet treatment of Bulgaria differed from the treatment of Romania and Hungary. Reparations were demanded of both, and
Romania was forced to return Bessarabia to
the Soviet Union. With the support of the
Soviet Union, the Paris Peace Treaties of
1947 confirmed Bulgarias retention of the
territory it had gained in southern Dobrudja
through the Treaty of Craiova. During the
policy of forced collectivization and Bulgarization under Bulgarian premier Vulko
Chervenkov (19001980) in the early 1950s,
more than 100,000 Turks were displaced
from Dobrudja and immigrated to Turkey.
Bernard Cook
See also: Berlin, Treaty of, 1878; Romania in
the Balkan Wars; Romania in World War I

Further Reading
Crampton, R. J. A Concise History of Bulgaria.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
1997.
Hitchins, Keith. Rumania, 18661947.
Oxford: Clarendon, 1994.

Dodecanese Campaign, 1944

Dodecanese Campaign, 1944


The islands of the southern Aegean Sea off
the southwest coast of Anatolia were
known through much of their history as the
Eastern or Southern Sporades (scattered).
The islands include Rhodes, Karpathos,
Kassos, Haliki, Kastellorizo (Castlerosso),
Alimia, Tilos, Symi (Simi), Nissyros, Kos
(Cos), Pserimos, Astypalea, Kalymnos, Telendhos, Leros, Lipsi, Patmos, Arki, and
Agnthonissi. Early in the twentieth century,
the Young Turks revoked the historic privileges enjoyed by the islanders, who were
part of the Ottoman Empire. Twelve islands
(dhodkeka nisia) joined in a failed protest
against the loss of these privileges, and the
name of Dodecanese stuck as a term for all
these islands, even though they exceeded
12 in number.
In 1912, as a consequence of the ItaloTurkish War, the Dodecanese Islands passed
to Italian control. In 1941, the Germans
joined their Italian allies in garrisoning the
islands, which were inhabited chiefly by
Greeks. The Italians had naval and air
bases on Rhodes, the strategic key to the
area. There was also an airfield on Kos, a
seaplane base and naval batteries at Leros,
and an air base on Scarpanto.
When Italy surrendered on September 8,
1943, the Dodecanese were occupied by
two poorly equipped Italian divisions totaling 37,000 men; Italian morale was very
low. The Germans had one division of
7,000 men, which was well equipped with
tanks and artillery. The local Greek population was excited at the prospect of liberation
by the Allied powers.
British prime minister Winston L. S.
Churchill (18741965) ordered that operations be conducted against the Dodecanese
Islands. He believed that success there

would open the way to the Dardanelles and


the Balkans. He also sought to induce
Turkey to join the war and to remove the
stain of Britains defeat in World War I at
Gallipoli. The original plan for an invasion
of the Dodecanese, prepared by the Middle
East Command, was known as Operation
Mandibles, but it was subsequently renamed
Operation Accolade. Churchill appealed to
President Franklin D. Roosevelt (1882
1945) and to General Dwight D. Eisenhower
(18901969) for aid to liberate the Dodecanese. The Americans, who were preparing a
landing on the Italian peninsula at Salerno,
rebuffed him. Roosevelt also suspected that
the British hoped to open a new front in the
Balkans. Coincidentally, the Combined
Chiefs of Staff meeting in Quebec ordered
most of the landing ships in the Middle
East to the Indian Ocean, which starved the
operation of needed assets.
When Italy surrendered on September 8,
1943, three British operatives led by Major
Lord George Jellicoe (19182007) parachuted onto Rhodes. They contacted Italian
authorities there and urged them to take the
Germans prisoner. However, Admiral Inigo
Campioni (18781944), commander of
Italian forces in the Aegean, hesitated. The
Germans, meanwhile, acted swiftly and
soon subdued the Italians.
The British nonetheless proceeded with
some landings, and by October 1943with
a force of 5,000 men and a small flotilla
they secured several islands, among them
Kos, Samos, Patmos, and Leros. They were
not able, however, either to gain air superiority or take Rhodes, and as long as the
Germans were secure at Rhodes, the British
could not hold the Dodecanese.
On October 3, 1943, the Germans went on
the offensive, attacking Kos. Heavy bombing of the island by Stuka aircraft reduced

97

98

Doiran, Battles of, 19151918

the British defenses, and soon the British


force there surrendered. Churchill refused
to consider a withdrawal, instead ordering
that Leros and Samos be held at all costs.
Indeed, the British reinforced Leros. On
November 12, the Germans attacked Leros
with overwhelming force, taking it four
days later. The British troops remaining in
the Dodecanese then withdrew.
Among British units involved were the
Long Range Desert Group, the Special
Boat Squadron, the Raiding Forces Levant
Schooner Flotilla, the Kings Own, the
Royal Irish Fusiliers, and the Durham Light
Infantry. The Greek navy provided seven
destroyers to assist the more numerous
British vessels. In the offensive, the British
lost four cruisers damaged and two submarines, six destroyers, and 10 small coastal
vessels and minesweepers sunk. The Royal
Air Force flew 3,746 sorties and lost 113
aircraft out of 288 involved. The British
army lost in all about 4,800 men, while the
Italians lost 5,350. German casualties
totaled some 1,184 men, 35,000 tons of
shipping (between late September and late
November 1943), and 15 small landing
craft and ferries. The operation failed as a
consequence of Campionis hesitation,
German aggressiveness, noncooperation by
the Americans, and the inadequacy of British resources. Holding the islands, however,
stretched German resources, ultimately
tying down some 60,000 Germans who
might have been better employed elsewhere.
After the war, the British governed the
Dodecanese until 1947. The islands were
then turned over to Greece.
A. J. L. Waskey
See also: Germany in the Balkans during
World War II; Greece in World War II; Italy
in the Balkans during World War II

Further Reading
Churchill, Winston S. The Second World War.
Vol. 5, Closing the Ring. Boston: Houghton
Mifflin, 1951.
Gander, Marsland L. The Long Road to Leros.
London: Macdonald, 1945.
Greene, Jack, and Alessandro Massignani. The
Naval War in the Mediterranean, 1940
1943. London: Chatham, 1998.
Holland, Jeffrey. The Aegean Mission: Allied
Operations in the Dodecanese, 1943. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1988.
Molony, C. J. C., et al. The Mediterranean and
Middle East. United Kingdom Military
Series, edited by J. R. M. Butler. Vol. 5,
History of the Second World War. London:
Her Majestys Stationery Office, 1973.
Pitt, Barrie. Special Boat Squadron. London:
Century Publishing, 1983.
Smith, Peter, and Edwin Walker. War in the
Aegean. London: William Kimber, 1974.

Doiran, Battles of, 19151918


The Battles of Doiran were a series of three
main engagements between Bulgarian
forces and British and Greek units around
Lake Doiran located along the 1914 GreekSerbian frontier in southern Macedonia
during World War I. Lake Dorian had
already been the location of a sharp battle
between the Bulgarian Second Army and
the Greek army on July 6, 1913, during the
Second Balkan War, in which the Greeks
forced the Bulgarians to retreat to the north.
During World War I, initial fighting in this
area developed on December 810, 1915, as
elements of the Bulgarian Second Army
pushed the British Expeditionary Force
back across the Greek frontier. Earlier that
fall, British and French troops had landed
at Salonika. These units had moved north

Doiran, Battles of, 19151918

along the line of the Vardar River in an effort


to link up with the hard-pressed Serbian
army in central Macedonia. After this
Bulgarian success, because of the demands
of their German allies, they halted at the
Greek frontier.
Over the next year, the Bulgarian First
Army established defensive positions all
along the old Serbian-Greek frontier, including formidable ones around the northern
edge of Lake Doiran. These were located
along the ridge line and included trenches,
barbed wire, machine gun nests, and artillery. The area remained relatively calm
through 1916.
On April 24, 1917, after two days of artillery fire, the British 122th Division and two
Greek regiments attacked the Bulgarian
positions west of the lake. This attack was
intended to take pressure off of the hardpressed Romanians and Russians. The 9th
Pleven Division of the Bulgarian First
Army held its ground. Another attack on
May 8 and 9 had the same result. The
Entente forces made no appreciable gains.
The British attempted another attack in
April 1918, without success.
The final major engagement at Doiran
occurred in September 1918 as a part of the
great Entente offensive that succeeded in
knocking Bulgaria out of the war. On September 18, 1918, four British Divisions, the
Greek Cretan Division and a regiment of
French Zouaves attacked the Bulgarian

First Army positions around Lake Doiran.


By September 20, the attacks died away.
The Bulgarian lines held everywhere. The
Bulgarians achieved a major defensive victory against the Entente attack. They had little time to enjoy this success, however. The
French and Serbian breakthrough of the
Bulgarian positions to the west at Dobro
Pole forced the Bulgarians to retreat all
along the line. British airplanes harassed
the retreating Bulgarians and caused numerous casualties. Nevertheless, the Bulgarians
still celebrate their September 1918 victory
at Doiran as illustrative of Bulgarian
military prowess, even though it had little
impact on the outcome of the war.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Bulgaria in World War I; Dobro
Pole, Battle of, 1918; Macedonian Front,
19161918

Further Reading
Falls, Cyril. Military Operations, Macedonia.
2 vols. Nashville, TN: Battery Press, 1996.
Hall, Richard C. Balkan Breakthrough: The
Battle of Dobro Pole 1918. Bloomington:
Indiana University Press, 2010.
Nedev, Nikola. Doiranskata epopeya 1915
1918. Sofia: Aniko, 2009,
Wakefield, Alan, and Simon Moody. Under the
Devils Eye: Britains Forgotten Army at
Salonika 19151918. Stroud, Gloucestershire: Sutton, 2004.

99

E
EAM/ELAS

The KKE soon became the dominant


group within the EAM. Georgios Siantos
(18901947) was appointed as the acting
leader as Nikolaos Zachariadis (19031973),
the KKEs leader, was interned at Dachau.
During the autumn of 1941, EAM expanded
its influence throughout Greece. In February 1942, EAM formed its military wing, the
Greek Peoples Liberation Army (ELAS),
which fought German, Italian, and Bulgarian
occupation forces starting in summer 1942.
In October 1943, the ELAS attacked the
non-Communist National Republican
Greek League (EDES) and the National
and Social Liberation movement (EKKA),
resulting in civil war. By spring 1944, the
ELAS had destroyed the latter group, forced
the remaining EDES fighters to evacuate to
Corfu, and liberated a large area of the
Greek mainland from Axis control. In
March 1944, EAM established the Political
Committee of National Liberation (PEEA)
and, in April, held elections to the PEEAs
parliament in which women were, for the
first time, allowed to vote.
The establishment of a government of
national unity, under George Papandreou,
in May 1944, temporarily ended the civil
war. After liberation in October 1944, the
tensions between EAM and the rightist,
nationalist republican forces, supported by
Britain, escalated. Because of disagreements
about the disarmament of ELAS, now numbering about 50,000, and the formation of a
national army, the EAM ministers resigned
on December 1.

EAM (Greek National Liberation Front) and


ELAS (Greek Peoples Liberation Army)
refer to the Greek leftist resistance movement and its military arm during the Axis
occupation of Greece during World War II.
(Note: The abbreviations are from the
Greek words for the noted groups.)
Leftist Greeks founded the Greek Communist Party (KKE) on November 4, 1919.
During the interwar years, the KKE supported the formation of labor unions, played
a prominent role in strikes and antiwar demonstrations, and supported the formation of
Popular Front movements after 1933. In
1936, General Ioannis Metaxas (1871
1941) seized control of the government, outlawed the KKE, and imprisoned or exiled
over 2,000 KKE members. When the
Germans invaded Greece in April 1941, the
KKE was in a state of disarray.
After the German conquest, several hundred KKE members escaped and went
underground. Following the German invasion of the Soviet Union, a reconstituted
KKE attempted to form an anti-Fascist resistance organization but received little support
from the center and rightist parties. Nevertheless, the KKE established the EAM on
September 27, 1941, with representatives of
the KKE, the Socialist Party of Greece
(SKE), the Union for Peoples Democracy
(ELD), and the Agricultural Party of Greece.
The EAM formally called for the liberation
of Greece from the Nazis and Italians.

100

EDES

The EAM organized a demonstration in


Athens on December 3, 1944. Police fired on
the crowd, killing 25 protesters and wounding
148 others. This clash escalated into a monthlong conflict, the December events, between
ELAS and British and Greek governmental
forces. The British and Greek government
victory led to the Varkiza Agreement of
February 1945, which disbanded ELAS. In
April, SKE and ELD left EAM, leaving the
KKE as the only party in the EAM.
The government conducted a white terror campaign against EAM-KKE supporters
during the rest of 1945, which eventually led
to the outbreak of the Greek Civil War in
March 1946. Former ELAS fighters formed
the Democratic Army of Greece (DSE),
which fought Greek government forces,
backed first by Britain and then the United
States, until 1949. During the Cold War, the
Greek government outlawed the KKE, vilified
EAM/ELAS as Communist subversive
groups, and accused them of various crimes
against their political rivals. After Andreas
Papandreou (19191996) came to power in
1981, the government recognized EAM as a
wartime resistance movement and honored
former ELAS fighters with state pensions.
Robert B. Kane
See also: EDES; Greece, Invasion of, 1941;
Greek Civil War; Papandreou, George (1888
1968)

Further Reading
Averoff-Tossizza, Evangelos. By Fire and Axe:
The Communist Party and the Civil War in
Greece, 19441949. New Rochelle, NY:
Caratzas Brothers, 1978.
Kousoulas, D. George. Revolution and Defeat:
The Story of the Greek Communist Party.
London: Oxford University Press, 1965.
Leeper, Reginald. When Greek Meets Greek.
London: Chatto and Windus, 1950.

EDES
EDES (National Republican Greek League)
was the largest of the non-Communist resistance groups during the Axis occupation of
Greece during World War II. (Note: The
abbreviations are from the Greek words for
the noted groups.)
On September 9, 1941, Colonel Napoleon
Zervas (18911957), a former army officer
with centrist political views, established
EDES. Politically republican oriented, it
strongly disliked the exiled king, George II
(18901947), and had some vague leftist/
socialist tendencies.
On the same day, Komninos Pyromaglou
(18901980), a friend and assistant of exiled
Nikolaos Plastiras (18831953), arrived in
Greece from Nice to form a republican
organization with socialist content. After
contacting Zervas, Plastiras took command
of EDES and, in October, established a
five-member Executive Committee. As the
organization grew, EDES contacted British
headquarters in Cairo, looking for funds,
weapons, and guidance.
EDES was initially limited to Athens but
steadily grew with the support of many
prominent Venizelist and Republican military figures. EDES contacted EAM and
tried to establish some form of cooperation.
The negotiations failed over the Communists demands to merge EDES with its military force, the Greek Peoples Liberation
Army (ELAS), and their distrust of Zervass
pro-British attitudes.
On July 23, 1942, after intense British
pressure and more than a month after the
official appearance of ELAS, Zervas and a
handful of companions set out for the Valtos
Mountains in west central Greece. Epirus
remained the primary area of EDES operations to the end of the occupation.

101

102

Enver Pasha

Supported by British parachute drops,


EDES quickly gathered some 100 fighters.
The first major EDES operation was the
destruction of the Gorgopotamos viaduct in
central Greece by a joint force of British
commandos and EDES and ELAS forces,
November 2526, 1942. Although the operation, one of the greatest sabotage acts in
occupied Europe, was successful and greatly
boosted the prestige of the nascent Greek
resistance, it also caused a significant rift
between EDES and ELAS. The British
loudly lauded EDESs role in the operation
and generally ignored the contribution of
the ELAS forces although the ELAS fighters
outnumbered the EDES fighters, presaging
the future problems between the two resistance groups.
Making relations between the two guerrilla groups worse, the ELAS several times
accused EDES and other rival organizations
of collaborating with the occupation
forces. As a result, ELAS attacked EDES
forces, numbering about 10,000 fighters, in
October 1943, triggering a civil war. In addition, Stylianos Gonatas, initially an EDES
political leader in Athens, supported the collaborationist Security Battalions. In February 1944, the EDES and the 12th German
Army, at the height of the fighting between
the two resistance groups, declared an armistice to fight the ELAS. On the other hand,
EDES accused ELAS for its pro-Soviet
views and crimes against non-Communists.
The two groups agreed to a fragile truce
in February 1944 with the establishment of
a government of national unity under
George Papandreou (19191996). However,
in December, two months after the liberation, ELAS forces in Athens attempted to
overthrow the government, and other ELAS
units attacked EDES positions in Epirus.
During the fighting in Athens, ELAS again
accused EDES of collaboration since the

Germans had explicitly exempted EDES


from its propaganda attacks. The numerically superior ELAS forces defeated the
EDES in Epirus, and EDESs remaining
fighters were evacuated to Corfu. After
British and government forces defeated the
ELAS in Athens in January 1945, EDES
forces returned to Epirus, where a portion
of them assisted in the expulsion of the
Cham Albanians.
Robert B. Kane
See also: EAM/ELAS; Greece, Invasion of,
1941; Greek Civil War; Papandreou, George
(18881968)

Further Reading
Averoff-Tossizza, Evangelos. By Fire and Axe:
The Communist Party and the Civil War in
Greece, 19441949. New Rochelle, NY:
Caratzas Brothers, 1978.
Leeper, Reginald. When Greek Meets Greek.
London: Chatto and Windus, 1950.
Mazower, Mark. Inside Hitlers Greece: The
Experience of Occupation, 194144. New
Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2001.

Enver Pasha (18821922)


The chief of general staff and the war minister of the Ottoman Empire during World
War I, Enver was one of the leading figures
of the military wing of the Committee of
Union and Progress (CUP), and after the
Sublime Porte raid (1913), he became the
leader of the military wing of the CUP. His
influence in joining the war alongside the
Germans propelled him to become the primary actor in the Ottoman Turkish side in
both military and political terms.
Enver was born in Constantinople on
November 22, 1882. After graduating from
the military high school, the Military Academy, and the General Staff College, he was

Enver Pasha

During World War I, Enver Pashas charisma


and flamboyant style allowed him to
dominate the Ottoman government. Thus he
bears great responsibility for the Ottoman
Empires ultimate defeat. (Perry-Castaneda
Library)

assigned to Macedonia as a general staff


captain (1902). His duties there requiring
struggle against the guerrillas influenced
him to embrace their tactics and nationalist
ideals. The experience he acquired against
these guerrilla groups and the fact that he
joined the CUP in those years formed the
basis for his subsequent military and political career.
In July 1908, while stationed in Macedonia, Enver disobeyed his superiors and took
to the mountains with the army units under
their command clearly imitating guerrillas
that they had fought against. This would
prove to be the spark that ended the 33-yearlong authoritarian rule of Abdulhamid II

(18421918), who was forced to declare


the Second Constitution (July 23, 1908).
Due to his role in restoring the constitution,
Enver was celebrated as the hero of
liberty. Next year, the so-called March 31
affair ended with the deposition of the
sultan.
Enver served as military attache in Berlin
during 19091911, which gave him the
opportunity to observe the military and
social structure of Germany. These observations were influential in cementing his
admiration for Germany and his strong conviction for the invincibility of the German
ground forces. Envers fame in the eyes of
the public grew even larger thanks to his
successes in Tripoli (Libya) against the
Italians. He was not able to return to Constantinople during the initial phases of the
Balkan War.
The unexpected and humiliating defeats
that had been suffered at the hands of Balkan nations turned the politics of the empire
upside down. The disillusioned officer members of CUP decided to overthrow the
government, which was labeled by many as
too lenient, unpatriotic, and conciliatory.
A small group of officer conspirators under
the leadership of Lieutenant Colonel Enver
launched a raid into the offices of the prime
ministry and forced the government to
resign.
The loss of Edirne (Adrianople) to
Bulgarians with the signing of the peace
treaty of London on May 30, 1913, turned
out to be a serious blow to the prestige of
the new CUP-led regime, which had legitimized its military coup by promising to
retain Edirne at all costs. Nevertheless, the
regime was saved at the last minute with
the initiation of hostilities between Bulgaria
and Greece and Serbia on the night of
June 29. Young general staff officers
immediately demanded action, while the

103

104

Epirus

civilian wing of the CUP and the generals


were still indecisive and wavering. Soon
the real authors of the coup detat, hawkish
general staff officers led by Enver, forced
the timid leaders to act. Amidst the fear of
a new war, advancing Ottoman units occupied Edirne without a fight on July 21.
In 1914, as the new generalissimo of
the empire by combining the offices of war
ministry and the general staff under his
authority, Enver initiated a large-scale reorganization of the Ottoman military, including the forced retirement of the old officers
and the promotion of young officers in their
place. These young officers would form the
backbone of the military leadership during
World War I and the Turkish National War
for Liberation. Envers belief in the
supremacy of German military thought and
his conviction for the eventual German victory were so strong that he left the command
of the Ottoman army to the German General
Staff during World War I. It was his idea to
create a new front in the East against Russia,
which would expand the scope of the war
theater so that it would be easier for the Germans to achieve victory on the Western
Front. The Germans naturally welcomed
this idea. In December 1914, he personally
took command of the Ottoman forces in a
large-scale attack against the Russians in
Eastern Anatolia, although he did not have
any conventional combat experience. The
operation ended terribly when thousands of
Turkish troops died in freezing weather;
nevertheless, this failure greatly boosted the
German General Staffs trust of Enver.
The CUP leadership, including Enver,
went into exile in order to escape from possible prosecution after the disastrous end of
World War I. He first went to Berlin, then
moved to Moscow, where he sought support
for the Turkish resistance in Anatolia.
Mustafa Kemals (Atatu rk; 18811938)

success as the leader of the nationalist


movement in Anatolia meant that conditions
were not suitable for Envers return. He later
traveled to Central Asia and tried to organize resistance against the Russians among
the Turkic peoples. Motivated by radical
Turkish nationalism, he tried to repeat his
success in Macedonia and Tripoli. He was
killed in action against the Russians near
Belcivan, in modern Tajikistan, on August 4,
1922.
zcan
Ahmet O
See also: Adrianople, Siege of, 19121913;
Ottoman Empire in the Balkan Wars; Young
Turks

Further Reading
Haley, Charles D. The Desperate Ottoman:
Enver Pas a and the German Empire.
Middle Eastern Studies 30, no. 1 (January 1994): 151; 30, no. 2 (April 1994):
22451.
Turfan, Naim. Rise of the Young Turks: Politics, the Military and Ottoman Collapse.
London: I. B. Tauris, 2000.
Yamauchi, Masayuki. The Green Crescent
under the Red Star: Enver Pasha in Soviet
Russia (19191922). Tokyo: Institute for
the Study of Languages and Cultures of
Asia and Africa, 1991.

Epirus
Epirus is a region of the western Balkan
Peninsula lying between the Pindus Mountains and the Ionian Sea. In the past, it
enjoyed periods of independence under Hellenistic and Byzantine rulers. In modern
times, it has had a complicated existence in
contention between Albania and Greece.
In later Ottoman times, the area corresponded to the vilayet of Yanya (Ioaninina,
Janina). During the Balkan Wars of 1912
1913, Epirus became the object of a major

Epirus

Greek offensive. The Greek Army of Epirus


invaded the area on October 18, 1912. The
Greeks conducted siege operations around
the city of Janina. Much of the resistance
came from local Albanians, who sought
inclusion in the new Albanian state. Janina
fell to the Greeks on 6 March 6, 1913. The
Treaty of London of May 30, 1913, and
the subsequent Treaty of Bucharest of
August 1913 assigned most of Epirus,
including Janina, to Greece. AustroHungarian and Italian insistence on the
establishment of a viable Albania, however,
ensured that the northern area of Epirus
went to Albania. The Greeks maintained a
strong interest in the region. On March 2,
1914, Epirote Greeks, with the collusion of
elements in Athens, proclaimed the Autonomous Republic of Northern Epirus. The
Greek government was reluctant to sustain
this regime, and it formally withdrew its
forces in June. Nevertheless, Greek irregulars continued to maintain a presence in the
region. The weak government in Tirana
was unable to enforce its authority there.
After the outbreak of World War I, the
Albanian state collapsed. Greek forces
returned to the region in October 1914.
Northern Epirus was recognized as an
integral part of Greece. In November1916,
French troops moving west from Salonika
entered Korce and recognized an autonomous province, or based upon the city.
They soon withdrew this recognition. In
1917, Italian forces pushed most of the
Greeks out of the region. After the end of
the war, Epirus again became an area of contention between Greece and the Italiansupported Albanian state at the Paris Peace
Conference. On July 20, 1919, Italy and
Greece concluded the so-called TittoniVenizalos agreement, by which Greece

recognized the Italian protectorate over


Albania. In return, the Italians accepted
Greek control of northern Epirus. The agreement lapsed because of Greeces involvement in Asia Minor. Greeces defeat there
caused it to accept the loss of Northern
Epirus for the time being.
Benito Mussolinis (1883 1945) attack
on Greece in October 1940 revived the question of Epirus. Greek forces not only
repelled the Italian incursion but advanced
into Albania to occupy Northern Epirus.
They remained there until the German invasion of Greece in April 1941. Epirus then
came under Italian rule until Italys surrender in September 1943. Then the Germans
took over control of the region. After
World War II, much of Epirus became a
battleground of the Greek Civil War from
1945 to 1949. The border between Albania
and Greece remained closed during most of
the Cold War, while a formal state of war
existed between the two countries. Only in
1987 did the state of war end. At the same
time the Greeks abandoned claims to
Northern Epirus.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Greece in the Balkan Wars; Greece
in World War I; Greek Civil War; Italy in the
Balkans during World War I; Janina, Siege
of, 19121913

Further Reading
Petsalis-Diomidis, N. Greece at the Paris
Peace Conference 1919. Thessaloniki:
Institute for Balkan Studies, 1978.
Stickney, Edith Pierpont. Southern Albania or
Northern Epirus in European International
Affairs, 19121923. Stanford, CA: Stanford
University Press, 1926.
Vickers, Miranda. The Albanians: A Modern
History, London: I. B. Taurus, 1995.

105

F
Ferdinand I, Czar of Bulgaria
(18611948)

(18541929), wavered between the Entente


and the Central Powers, seeking to regain
the territorial loses of the Balkan Wars. The
Central Powers appeared to be in the better
position to help Bulgaria realize this goal,
so in the autumn of 1915, Ferdinand followed his personal predilections and led
Bulgaria into an alliance with them and an
attack on Serbia. The Bulgarian collapse in
September 1918 led to popular unrest, culminating in the Radomir Rebellion that
forced Ferdinand from the throne. On October 4, 1918, he abdicated in favor of his
son Boris of Turnovo and fled to Germany.
Ferdinand died in Coburg on September 10,
1948, having outlived both his son Czar
Boris (b. 1894), who died in 1943, and
Prince Kyril (b. 1895), who was executed
by Bulgarian Communists in 1946.
Richard C. Hall

Ferdinand I of Bulgaria was a Bulgarian


prince and later czar. Born on February 26,
1861, in Vienna, Ferdinand was the fifth and
youngest son of Prince Augustus of SaxeCoburg (18181881) and Gotha and Princess
Clementine dOrle ans (18171907), the
daughter of Louis Philippe, the deposed king
of the French. Ferdinand promoted himself
to inherit the Bulgarian throne when it
became empty after the Russian-supported
overthrow of Prince Alexander Battenberg
(18571893) in 1886, and to general surprise,
he received the offer of the throne. Thereafter,
Ferdinand maintained a deep personal suspicion of Russia.
As prince of Bulgaria, Ferdinand pursued
a foreign policy that sought to use the
Great Power rivalries to Bulgarias advantage. He obtained a rapprochement with
Russia in 1895. In 1908, he conspired to proclaim full independence from the Ottoman
Empire for Bulgaria in conjunction with
Austria-Hungarys annexation of BosniaHerzegovina. At the same time, he assumed
the title of czar. During the First Balkan
War of 19121913, Bulgaria initially
achieved significant victories. Ferdinand,
who always had theatrical tendencies,
dreamt of an imperial entry into Constantinople. In the Second Balkan War, however,
Bulgaria suffered catastrophic defeats that
shook Ferdinands control.
When World War I began, Ferdinand
and his prime minister, Vasil Radoslavov

See also: Boris III, Czar of Bulgaria (1894


1943); Bulgaria in the Balkan Wars; Bulgaria
in World War I

Further Reading
Constant, Stephen. Foxy Ferdinand, Tsar of
Bulgaria. New York: Watts, 1980.
Iovkov, Ivan. Koburgut. Sofia: Partizdat, 1980.
Madol, Hans Roger. Ferdinand von Bulgarien,
der Traum von Byzanz. Berlin: Universitas,
1931.

Fiume/Rijeka, 19191924
This small independent state, consisting of
the city of Fiume and rural areas to its
north, existed between 1920 and 1924.

106

Fiume/Rijeka, 19191924

Known as Rijeka since 1945, it is a part of


present-day Croatia.
Between 1719 and November 1918,
Fiume existed as an essentially autonomous
entity with the Holy Roman Empire
(Austria-Hungary after 1867). After World
War I ended, both the Kingdom of Serbs,
Croats, and Slovenes (later Yugoslavia) and
Italy claimed the city, but the Great Powers
favored the establishment of an independent
buffer state. A South-Slav National Committee and an Italian National Council contended for control of the city, leading to its
occupation by British and French troops.
The Italian poet Gabriele DAnnunzio
(18631938) and his followers occupied the
city from September 12, 1919, until late
December 1920, and, a year later, proclaimed the Italian Regency of Carnaro.
On November 12, 1920, Italy and Yugoslavia signed the Treaty of Rapallo, which
affirmed the independence of Fiume.
DAnnunzio refused to acknowledge the
agreement, and Italian troops expelled him
from the city after fighting from December 24
to December 30, 1920. In April 1921, the voters approved the plan for a Free State. In the
first parliamentary elections, voters gave
the Autonomist Party 6,558 votes while the
National Bloc, composed of Fascist, Liberal,
and Democratic Parties, received 3,443
votes. The leader of the Autonomist Party,
Riccardo Zanella (18751959), became the
president.
From April to October 1921, political
control of Fiume was in a constant state of
flux with the Italian National Council of
Fiume, the Italian military, a nationalist

extraordinary government, an Italian royal


commissioner, and a group of DAnnunzio
loyalists in control for successive short
terms. In October, the autonomist Zanella
became provisional president until
March 3, 1922, when Italian Fascists took
control. In early March 1922, Italian troops
returned control to the constituent assembly,
still loyal to the Italian annexationists.
On January 27, 1924, Italy and Yugoslavia signed the Treaty of Rome, which
allowed Italy to annex Fiume and Yugoslavia to annex Susak. The government-inexile of the Free State considered these
annexations invalid and continued to act as
Fiumes legal government. After Italy surrendered in September 1943, the issue of
Fiume resurfaced. In 1944, a group of citizens supported the formation of a confederacy of Fiume, surrounding cantons, and
nearby islands. President Zanella of the
government-in-exile still sought the reestablishment of the Free State. However, Yugoslavian authorities occupied the city, now
called Rijeka, on May 3, 1945 and successfully obtained the city in the Paris Peace
Treaty of 1947.
Robert B. Kane

Further Reading
Macartney, Maxwell H. H., and Paul Cremona.
Italys Foreign and Colonial Policy, 1914
1937. London: Oxford University Press,
1938.
Nicolson, Harold. Peacemaking, 1919. New
York: Grosset & Dunlap, 1965.
Woodhouse, John. Gabriele DAnnunzio: Defiant Archangel. Oxford: Clarendon Press,
1998.

107

G
Gallipoli, 1915

Winston Churchill (18741965), but War


Minister Field Marshal Horatio Kitchener
(18501916) joined Churchill in supporting
the expedition. He saw the operation as a
repayment to Russia for having eased pressure in the East in 1914, even though Russia
was not then fully mobilized.
In January 1915, a huge fleet of French
and British ships, including 18 battleships
under Admiral Sackville Carden (1857
1930), gathered at Lemnos Island 60 miles
from the entrance to the Dardanelles, which
were mined and guarded by Turkish forts
on both sides. The first attack was launched
on February 19 against the forts at the
entrance of the straits, but the attack was
called off due to weather. The second attack
was made on February 25. The defensive
positions were overpowered by the naval
bombardment, and the Turkish and German
defenders withdrew.
When Carden tried to continue the attack
through the straits on March 13, however,
the defenders shelled the Allied minesweepers with mobile howitzer batteries. The
Allied attack was repulsed. Under great
pressure from London to continue the
attack, Carden resigned and was replaced
by Rear Admiral Sir John de Robeck
(18621928). On March 18, Robecks forces
tried once again to force the straits. Attacking in three waves, the Allied fleet was
almost successful. However, when three
Allied capital ships were sunk by mines
and two others were put out of action,
Robeck abandoned the attack.
With the failure to force the straits from
the sea, efforts shifted to an amphibious

The largest amphibious landing in history


until World War II, the Gallipoli campaign
was an Allied operation in 1915 on the
Gallipoli Peninsula of European Turkey in
the battle between the Allies and Turkish
forces for control of the Dardanelles
Straits. Turkey had entered the war on the
side of Germany and the Central Powers.
This created serious supply problems for
Russia, as it cut off easy access to its allies
from the Black Sea into the Mediterranean.
British leaders, seeking a way to expedite
the war that had bogged down in the stalemate of trench warfare on the Western
Front, saw a campaign against Turkey as
offering several advantages. A successful
attack against the Dardanelles might drive
Turkey from the war and open a supply
lane to Russia. In addition, an Allied
victory might draw German troops to the
East. French leaders, who wanted the
major effort on the Western Front, nonetheless went along.
The initial plan was to force the straits
with a naval operation alone. Once the fleet
had overcome the Turkish shore batteries
and entered the Sea of Marmara, it was
hoped that Greece, and perhaps Romania
and Italy, would abandon their neutrality
and join a Balkan coalition against Turkey.
Additionally, the planners believed that the
appearance of a British fleet off Constantinople might bring the downfall of the Turkish government and cause that country to
switch sides. The prime mover behind the
plan was First Lord of the Admiralty
108

Gallipoli, 1915

landing on the Gallipoli Peninsula. Sir Ian


Hamilton (18531947), commander of the
Mediterranean Expeditionary Forces, was
charged with that mission. The southern
end of the peninsula was chosen as the
point of attack. There were very few efforts

to prepare the Allied troops, most of whom


had little or no combat experience. There
was little concern on the part of the Allied
leadership. The Turkish army was held in
such contempt that no serious efforts were
made to study its methods, command

109

110

Gallipoli, 1915

structure, strength, or dispositions, despite


the fact that the Allies were about to undertake a potentially difficult and demanding
amphibious landing. To make matters
worse, maps of the peninsula, some taken
from tourist guide books, were out of date
and often inaccurate, and no detailed reconnaissance of the landing areas had been
undertaken.
Meanwhile, 84,000 Turkish and German
defenders under the command of German
general Otto Liman von Sanders (1855
1929), ably assisted by Turkish colonel
Mustafa Kemal (18811938), had not been
idle. Well alerted to the probability of an
Allied invasion, von Sanders organized six
divisions of the Turkish army in defensive
positions. The peninsula was hilly and
rocky, and he made excellent use of the terrain, fortifying the hills just beyond the
likely Allied invasion beaches and placing
the bulk of his troops in locations where
they could be rushed to any eventual Allied
landing site.
On April 25, 1915, some 75,000 troops
went ashore, including 30,000 from
Australia and New Zealand and some
17,000 from France. The French troops
went ashore on the Asiatic side of the straits
at Kum Kale, where they encountered a
large Turkish force. Advance there proving
impossible, on the 27th, the French were
extracted and transferred to Cape Helles.
On the European side of the Dardanelles,
the Allies selected five landing points from
which British forces under Lieutenant
General Sir Aylmer Hunter-Weston (1864
1940) would attack the heights in the peninsulas center at Cape Helles, where the
shoreline was rent by ravines and gullies,
presenting only a few small strips of beach
backed by cliffs. The Turks were well
entrenched on the high ground, and the difficult terrain, unmapped and unknown to the

Allies, concealed enemy machine-gun nests


and snipers. The Allied landings spearheaded by the 29th Division were well
planned and executed fairly efficiently
because, by luck, they occurred in weakly
held areas. Once ashore, however, the troops
were beset by confusion and irresolute leadership that typified the entire campaign, and
they failed to press their advantage by a
rapid advance inland. The advantage went
to the defenders, who rushed forces to
counter the landings, and the Allies soon
found themselves pinned down on the
beaches.
The Anzac Corps, under the command of
Lieutenant General Sir William Birdwood
(18651951), made a separate landing
north of the promontory of Gaba Tebe
(later called Anzac Cove). The Australian
and New Zealand troops made it to the landing beaches in good order, but before they
could move inland, Turkish troops from the
19th Division under Kemals forceful leadership occupied the Sari Bahr Ridge that
dominated the landing sites. The Anzacs
gained little ground against the defenders.
For the next three months, they held this
land at terrific cost, while British howitzers
and naval guns had little effect against the
Turkish positions on the heights. Allied
troops who were dug in near the coast
endured months of inconclusive but costly
engagements. Reinforcements were sent to
both sides, and the sweltering summer
brought high Allied casualties from both
the fighting and disease. What had been
envisaged as a swift, decisive action to
secure the peninsula degenerated into the
horrifying conditions of trench warfare, not
unlike those that prevailed on the Western
Front.
In London, Kitchener, Churchill, and the
British cabinet clung tenaciously to the
hope of a strategic victory in the East

Germany in the Balkans during World War I

through the first great amphibious operation


of modern times. Increasing numbers of
troops were deployed, and some gains were
made in the southern peninsula during
June. On August 610, a new effort was
made to carry the heights at Sari Bahr.
Fresh troops were landed at Suvla Bay,
north of Anzac Cove, with orders to advance
inland against the high ground, but poor
leadership resulted in another failure.
While Allied officers and men milled around
near the landing point, the Turks had time to
prepare for the coming attack, which they
easily repulsed. By September, it was clear
that the Gallipoli campaign was a disaster,
but it was not until years end that British
authorities could accept the fact and order a
withdrawal.
In October, General Sir Charles Monro
(18511933) replaced Hamilton. He concluded that the Allied situation ashore was
unsatisfactory and that without major
reinforcement, the army ashore would be at
serious risk over the winter. Kitchener
arrived on an inspection trip and recommended evacuation. On December 7, the
cabinet concurred. Monro predicted up to
40 percent losses in an evacuation, but the
withdrawal was completed by January 9,
1918, without loss of life. It was the largest
such operation of its kind in history until
the evacuation of the British Expeditionary
Force from Dunkerque (Dunkirk) during
World War II.
The Gallipoli campaign proved an expensive enterprise. A half million men had
deployed to the Dardanelles, of whom
about 252,000 became casualties. Turkish
records are incomplete, but their official
casualty record of 151,309 is undoubtedly
far too low. Regardless, the way to Constantinople was still blocked and would remain
so for the rest of the war. Russia was cut
off from easy access to its Allies, and the

ensuing economic chaos helped bring on


the Russian Revolution of 1917. Instead of
a morale-building victory, the Gallipoli
campaign had brought the British and
French a costly failure.
James H. Willbanks
See also: Kemal, Mustafa (18811938);
Ottoman Empire in World War I

Further Reading
Fewster, Kevin, Hatice Basarin, and Vesihi
Basarin. Gallipoli: The Turkish Story. London: Allen and Unwin, 2004.
James, Robert Rhodes. Gallipoli: The History
of a Noble Blunder. New York: Macmillan,
1965.
Laffin, John. Damn the Dardanelles! The Agony
of Gallipoli. London: Osprey, 1980.
Moorehead, Alan. Gallipoli. New York:
Harper, 1956.
Pugsley, Christopher. The ANZACs at Gallipoli. Melbourne, Australia: Lothian, 2000.
Travers, Tim. Gallipoli 1915. Stroud, Gloucestershire: Tempus, 2002.

Germany in the Balkans during


World War I
Germanys strategy and aims in the Balkans
from 1914 to 1918 were driven by the need
to support its alliesAustria-Hungary, Bulgaria, and Turkeyand to defeat attempts
by Russia, Britain, and France to dominate
the area. German leaders viewed military
success in the Balkans as vital to keeping
their allies in the war and ensuring continued access to the Balkans strategic
resources. In the end, however, German successes in southeastern Europe did little to influence the wars outcome.
Prewar German military and political
aims in the Balkans were governed by

111

112

Germany in the Balkans during World War I

alliance politics. German support of AustriaHungarys goals in the Balkans in the years
leading up to the war was central to the conflicts outbreak and spread in 1914. Yet this
almost unconditional encouragement of the
Dual Monarchy was a comparatively recent
development. Otto von Bismarck (1815
1898), who unified Germany in 1870 and
forged alliances with Austria and Russia
after the Balkan crisis of 18771878,
avoided such a commitment. Germanys
1879 alliances were defensive. Bismarck
was content to leave the Habsburg monarchy
to its own devices in the Balkans, saying
famously that the region was not worth
the bones of a single Pomeranian grenadier.
After 1890, however, Bismarcks successors, led by the new kaiser, Wilhelm II
(18591941), nursed greater ambitions in
southeastern Europe. Fears of encirclement
by Russia and France, along with the drive
for economic dominance in the Balkans
and the desire to bolster ties with the
Ottoman Empire and gain entry into the
Middle East, led a succession of German
officials to pursue a more forward policy,
including encouraging Austria-Hungary to
take a more aggressive stance toward Serbia
and the other small states in the region.
At the same time, German and AustroHungarian military planners began coordinating plans for war with Russia and Serbia,
assuming that such a conflict would escalate
into a general two-front European war. The
German General Staff s approval of the
Schleiffen Plan in 1905 reflected a growing
assumption by the German military that an
Austro-German confrontation with Russia
anywhere in eastern Europe would escalate
into a two-front war that Germany and the
Dual Monarchy could win only if Germany
could defeat France with a lightning attack
in the west before Russia could fully mobilize. This questionable assumption of war

was strengthened by Russias defeat in the


Russo-Japanese War of 19041905 and its
humiliating diplomatic reversal in the crisis
surrounding the Austrian annexation of
Bosnia-Herzegovina in 1909. The Balkan
Wars of 19121913 further destabilized the
region, leaving Turkey weaker and Germany
and Austria-Hungary more concerned about
Serbian and Russian ambitions. For
Germany and Austria, the rising military
strength of both Serbia and Russia made
action imperative before the military
balance shifted against them.
The assassination of Archduke Franz
Ferdinand in Sarajevo in June 1914 and the
ensuing crisis provided the flashpoint for
the outbreak and spread of war. Russian
mobilization to counter Austria-Hungarys
ultimatum to Serbia triggered the opening
German attack on France and Belgiuman
action that not only precipitated war with
France and Belgium, but also brought
Britain into the conflict.
The subsequent course of the war dictated
German actions in the Balkans. Germanys
central strategic priority was to secure her
southeastern flank and isolate Russia. The
failure of Austrias initial offensive against
Serbia and the deterioration of her strategic
position in Galicia, along with the stalemate
in the west and Turkeys and Bulgarias entries
into the war on the side of the Central Powers,
forced the German high command to
divert military and economic resources to
southeastern Europe to bolster their allies.
The German Eleventh Army, under the command of General August von Mackensen
(18491945), led the Austro-Hungarian
BulgarianGerman attack on Serbia in October 1915. The Eleventh Army remained along
the Macedonian Front for the remainder of
the war
The June 1916 Russian offensive, launched under the command of General A. A.

Germany in the Balkans during World War II

Brusilov (18531926), against the Dual


Monarchy scored spectacular initial successes and brought the Austrians to the
brink of collapse. The Brusilov Offensive
brought Romania into the war on the side
of the Allies. The German high command
was obliged to send massive reinforcements
to halt the Russian attacks and deal with the
new threat from Romania. Fortunately for
the Germans and their allies, they quickly
halted the Russians and turned to deal with
the Romanians, who proved ineffective.
Entente forces on the Macedonian Front
attempted to support the Romanians with
offensives in the Lake Doiran and Struma
River areas to tie down Bulgarian forces and
prevent a Bulgarian move against southern
Romania, but these attacks proved insufficient. Caught in a pincer between German
and Austrian forces advancing from the
north and a mixed force of German, Bulgarian, and Turkish troops advancing from the
south, the Romanian army and government
abandoned Bucharest on December 7, 1916,
and withdrew to Moldavia on the RussoRomanian border. The Romanian threat to
the Central Powers in the Balkans was over.
There was little further military activity in
the Balkans until summer 1918. By this
time, most German units and movable
equipment had left the Balkans in order to
participate in the great Western Front offensives in spring 1918. Only a command and
staff shell remained as Army Group Scholtz.
This combined the German Eleventh Army,
which by then contained many Bulgarian
units, with the Bulgarian First Army.
Although eliminating Romania ended the
immediate crisis for Germany and her allies,
the victory did little to improve their overall
strategic position. The Russian Revolution
and Russias subsequent withdrawal from
the war only inflamed home front discontent
among the Central Powers. Meanwhile, the

Allies continued to strength their base at


Salonika. By the time the Allies launched an
offensive in Macedonia on September 14
against the Bulgarians at Dobro Pole, German
forces in France were retreating, Germany
was facing defeat and the Habsburg and
Ottoman monarchies were facing collapse.
Two German divisions that were rushed to
Bulgaria arrived too late to help against the
Entente offensive. After Bulgaria left the war
on September 29, the remnants of the German
Eleventh Army slowly retreated north into
Austro-Hungarian territory.
In the end, the Balkans had proved
more of a liability than an asset to the
Germanstheir military successes in the
region notwithstanding. The drain on
Germanys resources growing out of the
need to constantly prop up their allies ultimately contributed to Germanys defeat.
Walter F. Bell
See also: Austria-Hungary in the Balkans
during World War I; Dobro Pole, Battle of,
1918; Bulgaria in World War I; Macedonian
Front, 19161918; Romania in World War I;
Serbia in World War I

Further Reading
Hall, Richard C. Balkan Breakthrough: The
Battle of Dobro Pole, 1918. Bloomington:
Indiana University Press, 2010.
Herwig, Holger. The First World War: Germany and Austria-Hungary 19141918.
London: Arnold, 1997.
Strachan, Hew. The First World War, Volume I:
To Arms. New York: Oxford University
Press, 2001.

Germany in the Balkans during


World War II
The Balkan Peninsula is bounded by the
Black Sea to the east, the Aegean and
the Mediterranean to the southeast, and the

113

114

Germany in the Balkans during World War II

Adriatic Sea to the west. At the time of


World War II, six states occupied the BalkansRomania, Bulgaria, parts of Hungary,
Greece, Yugoslavia, and Albania. The Balkans northern boundary is considered to be
the Danube and Sava Rivers. During World
War II, the Balkans played a central role in
the strategy of Nazi Germany and impacted
the German war effort in ways unforeseen
by Adolf Hitler and the German High Command at the wars onset.
Throughout World War II, Germany had
three objectives in the Balkans: to ensure
access to the regions resources, particularly
Romanian oil fields; to consolidate its
southern flank as a base for the war against
the Soviet Union; and to prevent the western
allies from gaining bases from which they
could bomb targets in Germany and eastern
Europe.
Between September 1939 and June 1941,
Hitlers approach to the Balkan states
evolved depending on the overall military
situation and Germanys relations with
Italy and the Soviet Union. Mussolinis
Italy, which had occupied Albania in 1939,
nursed ambitions vis-a`-vis Yugoslavia and
Greece. The Soviet Union, with whom
Germany had signed a nonaggression pact
in August 1939, also had territorial designs
on its borders with Rumania as well as the
traditional Russian dream of controlling the
Turkish Straits.
Germanys swift victories in Poland in
September 1939 and France and the Low
Countries in the spring of 1940 transformed
Germanys position in the Balkans. Hitler
could now assert German dominance over
the small states of the region. The need to
force Romania, Bulgaria, Hungary, and
Yugoslavia to allow a German military presence and to make them German satellites
gained urgency with Hitlers decision to
launch Operation Barbarossa against the

Soviet Union scheduled to begin in mid1941. In addition, Mussolini, without consulting the Germans, had invaded Greece
from Albania in October 1940. The Greeks
actually drove the invaders back into
Albania. Mussolinis actions further created
an opening for Britain to come to Greeces
aid and create a front in southeastern
Europe. Germany would have to mount a
military operation against Greece (Operation Marita) both to rescue its Italian ally
and consolidate its southern flank before
invading the Soviet Union.
The major problem in invading Greece
was to get German troops to the Greek frontier. Germany would need the cooperation of
Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, and Yugoslavia. Opening a diplomatic offensive in
November 1940, Hitler used a combination
of strong-arm tactics and promises of
economic and territorial rewards to bring
Hungary, Romania, and Bulgaria into line.
Yugoslavia, however, proved more difficult.
Although Hitler induced the government
of the regent Prince Paul to join the Axis,
a coup by the Yugoslav military on
March 27, 1941, overthrew Prince Pauls
(18931976) government, thus jeopardizing
the entire German position. Even though
the new government offered to sign a nonaggression treaty with Germany and allow
German troops to pass through southeastern
Yugoslavia and cross into Greece, Hitler,
incensed by anti-German demonstrations in
Belgrade, ordered an attack on Yugoslavia.
The German conquest of the Balkans took
only three weeks. On April 6, the Luftwaffe
undertook a heavy bombing raid against
Belgrade. Two days later, the German
Twelfth Army crossed the Yugoslav frontier
from its assembly areas in western Bulgaria.
On April 10, the XLIV Panzer Corps
invaded Yugoslavia from its position in
Romania. At the same time the German

Germany in the Balkans during World War II

Second Army entered Yugoslavia from the


north. Hungarian and Italian units accompanied their German allies. Yugoslav resistance quickly collapsed. Young King Peter
(19231970) fled the country, and the
Yugoslavs surrendered on April 18, 1941.
Meanwhile, the German Twelfth Army
continued on into Greece. It entered Thessalonika on April 9. The Germans brushed
aside a British force of two divisions and
one armored brigade on the Bulgarian frontier and quickly occupied the entire country.
By April 30, the British withdrew precipitously by sea, leaving Greece to deal with
the Germans alone. The Germans continued
their move south with the conquest of the
island of Crete by means of the first-ever
airborne invasion, launched on May 20.
The British and New Zealand forces were
once again forced to evacuate the island.
By June 1, the Germans were in control of
Crete. Through his aggressive political and
military moves, Hitler had blocked Soviet
influence in southeastern Europe, secured
his southern flank for the invasion of the
USSR, and eliminated any chance for Britain to create a base in Greece from which
they could threaten Germany from the south.
Axis conquest of the Balkans, however,
created a new set of problems for the
Germans and Italians. From the start until
the Germans withdrawal from the Balkans
in late 1944, the occupiers found themselves
embroiled in savage guerilla wars in both
Greece and Yugoslavia. In Yugoslavia in
particular, an uprising of Communist partisans, led by Marshall Josip Broz Tito
(18921980), grew into a major insurgency
that eventually tied down 15 German divisions. In addition, the Germans had to deal
with ethnic and sectarian clashes among
Yugoslavias Serb, Croat, Albanian, and
Muslim elements. Civil war raged between
Titos Communists on one side and the

etniks and predominately


Serbian-based C
Croat and pro-Fascist Ustasa on the other.
German regular army and SS units committed massive atrocities in reprisal for guerilla
attacks as well as against suspected partisans
etniks, and Ustasa militias
and Jews, the C
carried out genocidal massacres against
Jews, and Serbo-Croats viewed as hostile to
their own goals. Italys surrender to the
Allies in September 1943 placed a further
strain on German military resources when
the latter had to disarm their former allies
and take over their areas of occupation.
Hitlers difficulties in southeastern
Europe intensified in mid-1944 as the Soviet
advance into Romania and Bulgaria threatened to cut off German forces in the
Balkans. In October, the Germans withdrew
their troops from Greece, Albania, and
southern Yugoslavia. They conducted a
skillful retreat from the western Balkans for
the remainder of the war. After the Red
Army and Titos partisans took Belgrade on
October 20, 1944, the Germans retreated to
Croatia and Slovenia, where they and allied
Croatian and Slovenian forces held out
until the end of the war in May 1945.
The German occupation of the Balkans
proved costly in terms of human casualties,
both civilian and military, growing from
guerilla war and genocide. Military and
civilian deaths totaled nearly 2 million.
It set the stage for a Communist takeover in
Yugoslavia and a prolonged civil war in
Greece. There were echoes of World War II
in the Balkans 40 years later in the wars surrounding the breakup of Yugoslavia in the
1990s.
Walter F. Bell
See also: Albania in World War II; Bulgaria in
etniks; Crete, Battle of, 1941;
World War II; C
Greece in World War II; Hungary in World
War II; Italy in the Balkans during World

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116

Greco-Italian War, 19401941


War II; Romania in World War II; Tito, Josif
Broz (18921980); Ustas a; Yugoslavia in
World War II

Further Reading
Blau, George E. Invasion Balkans! The
German Campaign in the Balkans, Spring
1941. Shippensburg, PA: Burd Street
Press, 1997.
Hoare, Marko. Genocide and Resistance in
Hitlers Bosnia: The Partisans and the
Chetniks, 19411943. London: Oxford University Press (for the British Academy),
2006.
Pavolowitch, Steven K. Hitlers New Disorder:
The Second World War in Yugoslavia. New
York: Columbia University Press, 2008.
Shephard, Ben. Terror in the Balkans: German
Armies and Partisan Warfare. Cambridge,
MA: Harvard University Press, 2012.

Greco-Italian War, 19401941


The Greco-Italian War of 19401941 originated in the grandiose dreams of the Italian
dictator Benito Mussolini (18831945) to
recreate the Mediterranean realm of the
ancient Roman Empire. He adopted a hostile
policy toward his eastern neighbors Greece
and Yugoslavia. The Greeks sought protection from Mussolinis expansionist policies
in an arrangement with the other Balkan
states, the Balkan Entente, in 1934. Later,
the Greek dictatorship of Ioannis Metaxas
(18711941) attempted to thwart the Italians
by establishing close relations with Nazi
Germany, especially in the economic realm.
This was to no avail.
Mussolini indicated his hostile intentions
towards Greece after April 7, 1939,
when Italian forces occupied neighboring
Albania and supported Albanian claims on
northwestern Greece (Epirus). Mussolini
was eager to replicate the German successes

of the spring and summer of 1940. Italian


intentions became clearer on August 15,
1940, when the Italian submarine Delfino
torpedoed and sunk the Greek light cruiser
Elli in the harbor of the Greek Aegean island
Tenos. On October 28, 1940, at 0300 hours,
the Italian ambassador in Athens delivered
an ultimatum demanding that Italian troops
occupy strategic points throughout the
country. The Italians wanted to annex
northwestern Greek territories to Albania
and to take over the Ionian Islands and
some of the Aegean Islands. They intended
to first take Epirus and the Ionian Islands,
and afterward drive on Thessaloniki. In
spite of strenuous Italian efforts to gain
their support, the Bulgarians remained
aloof from the operation.
Metaxas immediately rejected the ultimatum. The Italian attack from Albanian
territory into northwestern Greece began
soon thereafter. Lieutenant General Sebastiano Visconti Prasca (18831961) commanded the Italian forces. Under the
leadership of General Alexander Papagos
(18831955), the Greeks responded to the
Italian attacks with a spirited resistance.
The Greek lack of armor and antitank weapons made little difference. Poor weather and
inadequate equipment hampered the Italian
advance from the start. They made little
progress. In an effort to shake up the Italian
command, on November 9, Mussolini
replaced General Prasca with General
Ubaldo Soddu (18831949). Soddu recognized that the offensive against the Greeks
had failed. After the partial destruction of
the Julia Division, he ordered his troops to
go over to the defensive.
The Greeks launched their counteroffensive all along the front on November 14.
By this time, the Greeks had concentrated a
force in the northwest that outnumbered the
invaders. The Greeks succeeded in pushing

Greco-Italian War, 19401941

the Italians back into Albanian territory. Italian tanks and trucks were not capable of
advancing over the miserable mountain roads
in the region. The lack of adequate port facilities in Albania also hampered the ability of
the Italians to maintain logistical support for
their soldiers. During their counteroffensive,
Greek troops occupied most of southeastern
Albania, including the important cities of
Korce, Pogradec, and Gjirokaster. Poor logistics, poor weather and Italian reinforcements
prevented the Greeks from reaching the
important port city of Vlore . By midDecember, both sides had reached a stalemate, with Greek forces occupying almost a
quarter of Albanian territory. General Ugo
Cavallero (18801943) replaced General
Soddu in mid-December. By this time British
aid had begun to bolster the Greeks. A Royal
Air Force (RAF) contingent of antiaircraft
guns, bombers, and fighters arrived. The British undertook missions to harass the Italian
rear areas in Albania. No British ground
forces, however, deployed due to Metaxass
fear of provoking the Germans.
The stalemate continued through most of
the winter months of 1941. After Metaxass
death on January 29, 1941, the new Greek
government authorized the appearance of
British ground forces. Four divisions of British troops began to arrive in March. In midMarch, the Italians attempted an offensive.
By that time, German intervention was
looming. The Italians wanted to make some
gains before the appearance of German
forces. They achieved little in the face of
determined Greek resistance.
Mussolinis failure in Greece initially
gave his German ally Adolf Hitler (1889
1945) little cause for concern. The appearance of the RAF in Greek air fields, however, was an entirely different matter. With
Operation Barbarossa, the invasion of Soviet
Russia, scheduled for the next spring, Hitler

became concerned about the fighting


between Greece and Italy. In general, the
presence of the RAF in Greece was a threat
in being to the southern flank of Operation
Barbarossaspecifically, the RAF could
bomb the vital Romanian oilfields and production facilities around Ploesti. In December 1940, Hitler decided that he must
intervene on the side of the Italians to
remove this potential problem. On December 13, 1949, he issued the instructions for
Operation Marita, the invasion of Greece
through Bulgaria and Yugoslavia.
The Germans initially counted on the cooperation of Yugoslavia. A coup on March
26, 1941, ousted the pro-German regime.
The invasion of Yugoslavia then became an
additional goal of Operation Marita. This
operation began on April 6. Within a week,
German, Hungarian, and Italian forces had
overrun Yugoslavia. Despite British assistance, Greece surrendered on April 20.
During the Greco-Italian War, the Greeks
demonstrated a marked ability to conduct
both defensive and offensive operations in
extremely difficult conditions of terrain and
weather. Greek morale generally remained
high. In contrast, the Italian equipment
proved to be of poor quality and little use.
Italian morale remained low throughout the
campaign. The Italians sustained 165,000
casualties, including over 40,000 dead and
missing. The Greeks lost 13,408 dead and
42,485 wounded in the fighting.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Balkan Entente, 1934; Greece, Invasion of, 1941; Greece in World War II; Italy in
the Balkans during World War II; Metaxas,
Ioannis (18711941)

Further Reading
Burgwyn, H. James. Mussolini Warlord:
Failed Dreams of Empire, 19401943.
New York: Enigma Books, 2012.

117

118

Greco-Ottoman War, 1897


Cervi, Mario. The Hollow Legions: Mussolinis Blunder in Greece, 19401941. Garden
City, NY: Doubleday, 1971.
Mazower, Mark. Inside Hitlers Greece. New
Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1993.

Greco-Ottoman War, 1897


The Ottoman administration tried its best to
stay away from war. However the overconfident Greek leadership saw the situation for
annexing Crete and even expanding on the
mainland further north as ripe for exploitation. A reinforced battalion-sized Greek paramilitary force with some Italian volunteers
attacked Ottoman border towers and defeated
a border company in Kranya (Krania) on
April 9. Even though they were repulsed and
retreated back to Greece the next day, the
incident forced the administration to declare
war on Greece on April 17, 1897.
The Greco-Ottoman War of 1897 was
fought in two separate theaters of operations;
Alasonya-Thessaly and Yanya (Janina)
Epirus. For the first time, the Ottoman high
command put contingency plans into use.
The plan was simple: strategic defense by an
army corps (two infantry divisions) in the
Yanya region, and strategic offensive by a
field army (seven infantry divisions and one
cavalry division) in the Alasonya region.
The main idea was to force Greeks to
overstretch their initial defensive lines,
which were very close to the border. The
main body of the Ottoman Alasonya Army
would try to fall behind the Greeks before
they were able to retreat back to the Yenisehir Line. Thousands of reserve soldiers
enthusiastically flooded the recruitment centers, and officials encountered difficulties
forcing them to send home excess numbers
of reserves. Thanks to the availability of
good railways, most of the units reached

their destination on time, and 40,000 personnel and 8,000 pack animals were transported
in 20 days. The transportation of baggage
from the last train station to Alasonya, however, took an inordinate amount of time and
effort due to poor road conditions and lack
of transportation assets.
The initial stage of the campaign showed
all the shortcomings of an inexperienced
but excessively enthusiastic army. Officers
and soldiers sometimes ran toward the
enemy as if in a race without paying attention to combat tactics and techniques, and
the first casualty figures of officers jumped
to abnormally high levels. Instead of conducting the encirclement maneuver as
planned, most units simply tried to push the
Greek defenders back by frontal assaults.
The second stage proceeded along the same
lines as the first. Ottoman units pushed the
Greek defenders back without attempting
encirclement maneuvers, and the Greeks
safely evacuated their defenses retreating to
their last defensive line.
Although confidence and firmer control
under fire replaced the combat inexperience
of the Ottoman rank and file, the first battle
of Velestin (Velestino) was a disaster. In
this encounter, a forced reconnaissance
turned into a futile and bloody assault
which proved that the Ottoman officers
especially needed more experience. The
operations on the Yanya Front did not go
smoothly, either. In the meantime, an unexpected Greek assault of April 18 dislocated
the Yanya Corps and defeated the Second
Division. Even though the Yanya Corps
gained confidence and recaptured the lost
ground in two weeks, it remained on the
defensive afterward. The three pitched
battlesVelestin, C atalca (Farsala), and
Do meke (Domokos)in front of the last
Greek defensive line turned out to be decisive. The Greek defenders were beaten in

Greco-Turkish War, 19191922

detail and lost any chance to safeguard the


road to Athens. However, thanks to the limited nature of Ottoman aims and the timely
intervention of the Great Powers, Greece
was saved from further humiliation.
Mesut Uyar
See also: Balkan Wars, 19121913, Causes;
Greece in the Balkan Wars

Further Reading
Bartlett, Ellis A. The Battlefields of Thessaly:
With Personal Experiences in Turkey and
Greece. London: John Murray, 1897.
Bigham, Clive. With the Turkish Army in Thessaly. London: Macmillan and Co., 1897.
von der Goltz, Colmar, Der Thessalische Krieg
und die Turkische Armee. Berlin: E. S. Mittler und sohn, 1898.
Sun, Selim. 1897 Osmanl-Yunan Harbi.
Ankara: Genelkurmay Basmevi, 1965.

Greco-Turkish War, 19191922


This war, lasting from May 1919 to October 1922, between Greece and Turkish
nationalists occurred as a result of the partition of the Ottoman Empire after World
War I and produced continuing animosity
between Greeks and Turks. When World
War I broke out in 1914, the Ottoman
Empire had about 2.5 million Greekspeaking Orthodox Christians in Anatolia.
King Constantine of Greece (18681923)
declared neutrality, but Prime Minister Eleuthe rios Venize los (18641936) hoped to
obtain Greek-inhabited eastern Thrace, the
islands of Imbros and Tenedos, and parts of
western Anatolia around Smyrna (Izmir).
When he began negotiations with the Allies,
the king dismissed him. Venizelos, with the
help of the Entente, eventually forced
Constantine to abdicate in May 1917.
Greece declared war on the Ottoman Empire

on July 2, 1917. The Treaty of Se`vres, concluded on August 10, 1920, between the
Allies and the Ottoman Empire, among
other provisions, allocated these territories
to Greece.
Meanwhile, after the Armistice of
Moudros, signed in May 1919, 20,000
Greek troops occupied Smyrna. The Greeks
of Smyrna greeted the Greek troops as liberators, and the Turkish army put up little
opposition to the Greek landings. However,
a Turkish nationalist killed the Greek
flag-bearer, resulting in shooting that killed
between 300 and 400 Turks and 100 Greeks.
During the summer of 1920, the Greek army
launched several offensives that extended
Greek control over much of western
Anatolia.
In October 1920, the Greek army renewed
its advance into Anatolia to pressure
Mustafa Kemal (18811938), the leader of
the Turkish nationalists, to sign the Treaty
of Se`vres. The advancing Greeks could not
decisively defeat the Turks, who retreated
in an orderly fashion.
In early 1921, the Greek army resumed its
advance but met stiff resistance from the
entrenched Turks. On January 11, 1921, the
Turkish forces halted the Greek advance at
the first battle of Inonu and defeated the
Greeks at the second battle of Inonu on
March 30. These Turkish military successes
caused the Allies to meet in London to consider amending the Treaty of Se`vres.
In early July 1921, a reinforced Greek
army launched another major offensive against Turkish troops along the
Afyonkarahisar-Kutahya-Eskisehir line.
The Greeks broke through the Turkish
defenses and occupied these strategically
important cities but halted for a month.
Kemal used this delay to retreat to the east
of the Sakarya River and organize defensive
lines about 62 miles from Ankara.

119

120

Greece, Invasion of, 1941

In early August 1921, the Greek army


advanced on the Turkish defenses. From
August 23 to September 13, the fighting seesawed across the Turkish defenses. Then,
the Greek army tried to capture Haymana,
25 miles south of Ankara, but the Turks
held out. Exhausted by the ferocity of the
battle, the Greeks decided to withdraw
to their lines of June. The Greeks then
retreated to Smyrna.
In March 1922, the Allies tried to negotiate a cease-fire between the Greeks and
Turks, but Kemal insisted that Greeks withdraw from Anatolia. The Turks then
defeated the Greeks at the Battle of Dumlupinar near Afyon on August 30, 1922. On
September 9, Turkish troops occupied
Smyrna, and the remaining Greek forces
evacuated Anatolia. The Turks destroyed
the city and killed most of the Greeks left.
News of the massacre at Smyrna caused
over a million Greeks to leave Anatolia for
Greece. In retaliation, Greece forced about
500,000 Turks living in Greece to immigrate
to Turkey.
As Kemals forces advanced toward the
Dardanelles and the Bosporus, Italian and
French forces abandoned their positions at
the straits, leaving the British alone. On
October 15, 1922, Britain, France, Italy,
Greece, and Kemal signed the Armistice of
Mudanya by which the western allies
retained control of eastern Thrace and the
Bosporus and the Greeks evacuated these
areas. The Treaty of Lausanne, signed on
July 24, 1923, recognized the independence
of the Turkish Republic, the end of Greek
territorial claims in Anatolia, and Greeces
acceptance of its prewar borders.
Robert B. Kane
See also: Kemal, Mustafa (18811938); Macedonian Front, 19161918; Lausanne, Treaty
of, 1923; Se`vres, Treaty of, 1920; Smyrna,

Destruction of, 1922; Venizelos, Eleutherios


(18641936)

Further Reading
Clogg, Richard. A Short History of Modern
Greece. 2nd ed. Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 1986.
Howard, Douglas A. The History of Turkey.
Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2001.
Lewis, Bernard. The Emergence of Modern
Turkey. London: Oxford University Press,
1961.
Shaw, Stanford J., and Ezul Kural Shaw. History of the Ottoman Empire and Modern
Turkey. Vol. 2, Reform, Reaction and
Republic: The Rise of Modern Turkey,
18081975. Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 1977.

Greece, Invasion of, 1941


On April 6, 1941, German forces undertook
a massive invasion of Greece. The Italians
had previously invaded Greece on 28 October 28, 1940. Within weeks of the unprovoked Italian aggression, the Greeks not
only repelled the Italians, but advanced into
Italian-held Albania. Difficult weather and
topography imposed a stalemate during the
winter of 19401941. Soon after the Italian
attack, Britain offered aid to the Greeks. At
first, Greek dictator Ioannis Metaxas
(18711941) agreed only to British air and
material support in order not to antagonize
the Germans. After his death on January 29,
1941, the new Greek government accepted a
British offer of ground troops.
The appearance of British forces in
Greece alarmed Adolf Hitler (18891945),
because he perceived them as a threat to
the southern flank of the upcoming invasion
of Soviet Russia, Operation Barbarossa.
Also the Royal Air Force (RAF) bases
in Greece were proximate to the vital

Greece, Invasion of, 1941

Romanian oil fields at Ploesti. Consequently, Hitler decided that the British must
be eliminated from Greece before the Germans embarked upon Operation Barbarossa.
The German staff prepared Operation
Marita for the invasion of Greece. Vital for
effort was Bulgarias joining the Tripartite
Pact on March 1, 1941. This gave the
Germans Bulgarian bases and a long frontier
across which to invade Greece. An attempt
by the Germans to enlist Yugoslav help
failed when Serbian officers overthrew
the compliant Yugoslav government on
March 26, 1941. An enraged Hitler then
included the invasion of Yugoslavia within
the scope of Operation Marita.
The German invasion of Greece and
Yugoslavia began on April 6, 1941. The
German Twelfth Army under the command
of General Wilhelm List (18801971) came
up against the Greek fortifications called
the Metaxas Line, which stretched from the
Aegean Sea, along the Struma River and
curved to the west along the Bulgarian frontier. The Greek Second Army (Western
Macedonia) was arrayed all along the
Metaxas Line. The Greek First Army (Epirus) was committed to the Albanian Front.
The Greeks did not intend to defend western
Thrace beyond the Struma River. General
Alexander Papagos (18831955) commanded the Greeks. Assisting the Greeks
was a British expeditionary force of around
50,000 men led by General Henry Maitland
Jumbo Wilson (18811964), which also
included Australian and New Zealand
troops. These troops arrived from Egypt at
the end of March, and deployed with the
Greek Second Army.
Within three days of the invasion, German
forces broke through the Metaxas Line at a
point considered inaccessible by the Greeks.
It immediately headed for Thessaloniki,
which it entered on April 9. This compelled

the British and Greek defenders to abandon


the Metaxas Line and to withdraw south
from Macedonia and Albania. They
attempted to establish defensive positions
first at the Aliakmon River, then later at
Thermopylae, near the site of the ancient
battle between the Persians and the Spartans
in 480 BC. But the Germans breached the
Aliakmon River defense on April 15 and
reached Thermopylae on April 22. By this
point the British force had already decided
to evacuate Greece.
On April 23, some members of the Greek
high command, with its units in Epirus isolated from the rest of its forces, decided to
surrender. Despite opposition from some
Greek generals, and without the approval of
the Greek government, Greek First Army
commander General Georgios Tsolakoglou
(18861948), surrendered the entire Greek
army to the German invaders at Larissa on
April 21, 1941. Tsolakoglou surrendered to
the Italians on April 23, at the insistence of
the Germans. Meanwhile, continuing their
fighting retreat, the British evacuated most
of their troops from Piraeus and Volos in an
operation reminiscent of Dunkirk the previous year. The RAF contingent flew to
Crete and to Egypt, while other forces
escaped to Crete. By late April, most of the
British force had successfully evacuated,
despite a successful German attack on the
Isthmus of Corinth on April 25 in an effort
to block the British withdrawal.
The Germans entered Athens on April 27.
By April 30, all the British were captured or
gone and the campaign was over. The Germans established a collaborationist regime
under General Tsolakoglou. Greece was parceled out among the Bulgarians, Italians,
and Germans. Having swiftly overrun
Greece with relatively few casualties, the
Germans prepared to invade Crete.
Richard C. Hall

121

122

Greece in the Balkan Wars


See also: Crete, Battle of, 1941; Greco-Italian
War, 1941; Greece in World War II; Salonika;
Tsolakoglou, Georgios (18861948)

Further Reading
Blau, George E. Invasion Balkans! The
German Campaign in the Balkans, Spring
1941. Shippensburg, PA: Burd Street
Press, 1997.
Mazower, Mark. Inside Hitlers Greece. New
Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1993.
Tarnstrom, Ronald. Balkan Battles. Lindsbrog,
KS: Trogen, 1998.

Greece in the Balkan Wars


Greeces defeat in the short 1897 war
against the Ottoman Empire increased its
determination to secure territory in Epirus,
Macedonia, and Thessaly as well as Crete
and the Aegean Islands. This defeat also
convinced Greek military and political leaders that some kind of alliance with the other
Balkan states would be necessary to accomplish their nationalist goals. The Young Turk
seizure of power in Constantinople in 1908
and the possibility of revived Ottoman
power increased the urgency of realizing
these goals.
In 1909, the Athens government began a
series of overtures to Sofia for a formal alliance. After the Bulgarians signed a treaty
with Serbia on March 13, 1912, they began
negotiations with the Greeks. The Greek
navy, which had among its ships eight
destroyers and the large armored cruiser
Georgios Averof, was an important asset to
a Balkan alliance, because it could check
the resupply of European forces and the
transfer by sea of Ottoman reinforcements
from Anatolia to Europe. The Greeks had a
small peacetime army that upon mobilization would grow to 110,000 men. National
Guard, Cretan volunteers, and an Italian

legion increased the numbers by another


70,000. On May 29, 1912, the Bulgarians
and Greeks signed an alliance agreement.
A significant flaw in this arrangement was
the lack of a clear division of Ottoman territories between Bulgaria and Greece. This
was mainly because the Bulgarians were
confident that their armies could gain the
greater portion of Ottoman territories.
Fighting in the First Balkan War began
on October 18, 1912. The Greek army
advanced in two directions. The Army of
Thessaly moved north toward Thessalonica
(Salonika). After a sharp fight at Giannitsa
on November 1, the Army of Thessaly occupied much of southern Macedonia and
entered Thessalonica on November 8, one
day ahead of a Bulgarian detachment coming from the north. The Army of Epirus
advanced to the northwest. By early December, it had attacked the important town of
Ionnina (Janina), but it lacked the forces to
fully implement a full siege. Meanwhile,
the Greek fleet took control of the Aegean
Sea. It blocked the Ottoman navy in the Dardanelles and at the same time landed Greek
forces on most of the Aegean Islands.
The Greeks did not participate in the
December 1912 armistice so that they
might continue their efforts to take Ionnina.
There they increased the numbers of artillery pieces and troops during December.
Although a major assault on January 20
failed, another attack on March 6 led by
Crown Prince Constantine (18681923) succeeded. Greek troops entered the city that
same day.
Meanwhile, the Greeks and Bulgarians
contested the division of southern Macedonia. Skirmishes between Bulgarian and
Greek troops erupted there in the spring of
1913. Salonika in particular was a point of
contention. Serbian disputes with Bulgaria
over the division of northern Macedonia led

Greece in World War I

to the conclusion of a Greek-Serbian alliance on June 1, 1913. One month later, the
Bulgarians launched attacks on Greek and
Serbian positions in Macedonia. The Greek
counterattack inflicted a severe defeat on
the Bulgarian Second Army. The Greeks
pushed the Bulgarians out of southern Macedonia and eliminated the isolated Bulgarian
garrison in Salonika. The Greek advance up
the Struma River, however, almost ended in
disaster when Bulgarian forces surrounded
the Greeks in the Kresna Gorge. The conclusion of an armistice on July 31, 1913, saved
the Greeks from defeat.
Greece was a big winner in the Balkan
Wars. At a cost of around 8,000 dead and
45,000 wounded, the Greeks gained considerable territories in Epirus, Thessaly, and Macedonia. In addition, the Greeks obtained
most of the Aegean Islands and the formal
annexation of Crete. These annexations only
increased the appetite of Greek nationalists
for further territories in Thrace and Anatolia
as well as the great prize of Constantinople.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Balkan League, 1912; Balkan War,
First, 19121913; Balkan War, Second, 1913;
Balkan Wars, 19121913, Causes; Balkan
Wars, 19121913, Consequences; Balkan
Wars, 19121913, Naval Campaigns

Further Reading
Fotakis, Zisis. Greek Naval Strategy and Policy 19101919. London: Routledge, 2005.
Hall, Richard C. The Balkan Wars, 1912
1913: Prelude to the First World War. London: Routledge, 2000.
Hellenic Army General Staff. A Concise History of the Balkan Wars, 19121913.
Athens: Army History Directorate Publication, 1998.
Jowett, Philip S. Armies of the Balkan Wars,
19121913. Oxford: Osprey, 2011.

Greece in World War I


When World War I erupted in the summer
of 1914, the Greek government was unprepared to participate. Even though Greece
had an alliance with Serbia dating from
May 1913, Greek prime minister Eleutherios Venizelos (18641936) was unable to
secure Greek intervention on the side of
the Entente, which he personally favored.
The Greek king Constantine I (1868
1923) and much of the Greek army officer
corps, however, were pro-German. Constantine was the German kaisers brotherin-law. Many senior officers had received
military training in Germany. Furthermore,
the Greek army and state were exhausted
from their efforts in the Balkan Wars of
19121913 and needed time to recover.
The Greek government was concerned that
with Serbia engaged against AustriaHungary, Bulgaria might use the opportunity to attack Greece to gain territories lost
in the Second Balkan War of 1913. Finally,
the Ottoman Empire still represented a
threat to Greece because of disputes over
Chios and Mytilene in the Aegean Islands.
Because of these issues, Venizelos, despite
his personal inclinations, indicated to
Serbia that Greece would not fulfill its
treaty obligations.
The entry of the Ottoman Empire into the
war on the side of Austria-Hungary and Germany on November 1, 1914, provided new
incentive for Greek action. In January 1915,
the British offered Greece Ottoman territory
in Asia Minor in return for intervention in
the war and aid to Serbia. The Greek army
opposed any venture in Asia Minor because
of concerns about Bulgaria. Venize los
attempted to bring Greece into the war to
participate in the Gallipoli campaign. The
Russians had no desire to see the Greeks in

123

124

Greece in World War I

Constantinople. As a result Venize los


resigned on March 6.
In the autumn of 1915, Venizelos returned
to power. At the same time, Bulgaria joined
the Central Powers and prepared to invade
Serbia. On October 3, 1915, Venizelos consented to Entente landings in Salonika. The
British and French intended to move up the
Vardar River to aid the Serbs. Because of
King Constantines opposition to his policies, however, Venizelos resigned again on
October 5, just as the first Entente units disembarked in Salonika. For the time being,
they were unwelcome guests in Greece. In
December 1915, the Bulgarians forced the
British and French back across the Greek
frontier. The Entente forces then took measures to establish themselves in and around
Salonika. The Entente further violated
Greek neutrality by depositing the remnants
of the Serbian army on Corfu after its trek
across the Albanian Alps.
A Bulgarian offensive in May 1916
brought the war further onto Greek territory.
On 26 May the Greek garrison of Fort Rupel
surrendered without a fight to the Bulgarians. This indicated the degree within the
Greek military of antagonism toward the
Entente presence in Greece. Later that
summer, a Bulgarian offensive brought
much of southeastern Macedonia under
Bulgarian control, including the towns of
Drama, Kavala, and Serres. The Bulgarians
also briefly occupied Florina.
With both warring sides violating
Greek neutrality, a cabal of pro-Entente
Greek military officers decided to act. On
August 30, 1916, with the encouragement
of Venizelos, they established a pro-Entente
government in Salonika in opposition to the
royal neutralist government in Athens. Venizelos, having first toured the Aegean Islands
to gather support, joined the officers on
October 9 and established a separate Greek

government and army. This division is


known as the national schism.
The Entente attempted to force the issue
by landing troops in Athens in December 1916. Royalist forces offered strong
opposition and compelled the British and
French to withdraw. After armed intervention against the royalist regime failed, the
Entente imposed a naval blockade around
Greece and expanded their presence in
northern Greece. Finally, on June 10, 1917,
the French demanded that King Constantine
abdicate within 24 hours and prepared to
occupy Athens. Confronted with overwhelming force, and with no help possible
from the Central Powers, Constantine complied with the ultimatum. Constantines second son Alexander (18931920) assumed
the throne because his elder brother George
(18901947) shared his father Constantines
pro-neutralist sentiments. King Alexander
agreed to the formation of a national
government under Venizelos. The national
schism of almost a year was over. Greece
then declared war on the Central Powers on
June 30, 1917, the final European state to
enter the war.
After a period of training and refitting,
during the spring of 1918, the Greek army
joined the other Entente forces on the Macedonian Front. Six Greek divisions added
over 290,000 men to the British, French,
French Colonial, Italian, and Serbian troops
already there. By time the Greeks arrived,
the Russian soldiers on the Macedonian
Front had succumbed to revolutionary
ideas and had left the front. The Greek
army achieved some success against the
Bulgarians at the battle of Yerbichna in
May 1918, pushing the Bulgarians out of
fortified positions northwest of Salonika.
The joint British-Greek effort at Lake
Doiran in September 1918, however, stalled
in the face of determined Bulgarian

Greece in World War II

resistance. After the conclusion of the Bulgarian armistice in Salonika on September 29, Greek forces occupied western
(Bulgarian) Thrace and entered Constantinople with other Entente troops.
Greeces success in World War I was a
prelude to the disastrous intervention in
Asia Minor and war against Turkey during
19191922. It raised national expectations
and inflated anticipated capabilities. Defeat
in that war compelled the Greeks to evacuate Asia Minor and also to leave much of
eastern Thrace and the island of Imbros,
which they had occupied at the end of
World War I. Nevertheless they did retain
western Thrace.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Bulgaria in World War I; Constantine I, King of Greece (18681923); Doiran,
Battles of, 19171918; Greco-Turkish War,
19191922; Macedonian Front, 19161918;
Salonika; Venizelos, Eleutherios (18641936)

Further Reading
Clogg, Richard. A Concise History of Greece.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
1992.
Hall, Richard C. Bulgaria, Romania and
Greece. In The Origins of World War I,
edited by Richard F. Hamilton and Holger
H. Herwig. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003.
Leon, George. Greece and the Great Powers.
Thessaloniki: Institute for Balkan Studies,
1978.
Petsalis-Diomidis, N. Greece at the Paris
Peace Conference (1919). Thessaloniki:
Institute for Balkan Studies, 1979.

Greece in World War II


When war erupted in Europe in 1939, the
Greek government attempted to remain
neutral. By that time, the Greek economy

depended heavily upon commercial relations with Nazi Germany. The Greek dictator, Ioannis Metaxas (18711941), admired
his German counterpart. He had been
among those Greek army officers who
favored the Central Powers during World
War I. The Italian dictator Benito Mussolini
(18831945), however, had designs on
Greece. He aspired to control the eastern
Mediterranean Sea region. Especially after
the German successes in western Europe in
the spring of 1940, he wanted to demonstrate to Nazi Germany that Fascist Italy
was capable of similar feats of arms.
During the summer of 1940, the Italians
began a series of provocations directed
against Greece. The most overt of these
was the sinking of the Greek light cruiser
Helle in the harbor of Tinos on August 15,
1940, by an Italian submarine. Metaxas
refused to respond to these actions. He
hoped that his good relations with Nazi
Germany would keep Greece out of the
war. In this hope he was soon disappointed.
On October 28, the Italian ambassador in
Athens presented an ultimatum demanding
that Italian troops be permitted to occupy a
number of strategic points throughout
Greece. Metaxas famously replied with the
single negative, no. Later that day, Italian
troops began the invasion of Greece from
bases in Italian occupied Albania. The
Greek armed forces responded vigorously
to the Italian invasion. By mid-November, a
Greek counteroffensive had thrown the Italians out of Greece. Greek forces occupied
much of southern Albania before winter
conditions imposed a stalemate. Britain
sent some material aid to the Greeks. Metaxas, however, refused to allow British
military forces into Greece for fear of provoking the Germans.
After Metaxas died on January 29, 1941,
the new Greek government invited further

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Greece in World War II

German panzer units move southward through Greece in April 1941 despite heavy spring
rains and muddy roads. (Library of Congress)

British assistance. Airmen and army personnel began to arrive in the spring. The appearance of British forces in Greece alarmed
Adolf Hitler (18891945), because he perceived them as a threat to the southern
flank of the upcoming invasion of Soviet
Russia, Operation Barbarossa. Also, the
Royal Air Force (RAF) bases in Greece
were proximate to the vital Romanian oil
fields at Ploesti. To eliminate this potential
threat, and to help the stricken Italians, the
Germans prepared Operation Marita for the
invasion of Greece. A pro-British coup in
Belgrade on March 26 caused Hitler to
incorporate an invasion of Yugoslavia within
Operation Marita.
The Greeks had most of their forces
divided between southern Albania and prepared defensive positions facing Bulgaria
known as the Metaxas Line. A British force
that arrived from Egypt in March 1941
supplemented the Greeks. The Germans

attacked Greece from Bulgaria on April 6.


They reached Thessalonika on April 9. This
advance separated Greece from Yugoslavia.
It also caused the British and Greeks to
abandon the Metaxas Line and retreat to
the south. They attempt to establish a defensive position at the Aliakmon River, but that
position was breached by the Germans on
April 15. Then at Thermopylae, near where
the Persians and the Spartans once battled
in 480 BC, the British and Greeks attempted
one more defense. The Germans reached
Thermopylae on April 22.
By April 23, the British force having
opted to evacuate Greece, some members
of the Greek high command, with its units
in Epirus isolated from the rest of its forces,
decided to surrender. General Georgios
Tsolakoglou (1886-1948, the First Army
commander, surrendered the entire Greek
Army to the German invaders of Greece at
Larissa on 21 April 1941. Although some

Greece in World War II

Greek generals opposed the surrender, they


were unable to prevent it. Because of
German insistence, Tsolakoglou surrendered to the Italians on 23 April. These surrenders occurred without the sanction of
the Greek government. The British continued with their fighting retreat. They succeeded in evacuating most of their troops
from Piraeus and Volos in an operation reminiscent of Dunkirk the previous year. Most
went to Crete. The RAF contingent flew to
Crete and to Egypt. In an effort to block the
British withdrawal, the Germans undertook
a successful attack on the Isthmus of Corinth
with airborne forces on 25 April 25. By
then, however, most of the British had succeeded in getting away. King George II
(18901947) and some of his ministers fled
to Crete, and afterwards to Egypt. He spent
the war in Great Britain. On April 27,
German forces entered Athens. By
April 30, all the British either were captured
or had evacuated Greece. On May 20,
German paratroops attacked British and
Greek forces on Crete. By June 1, German
and Italian troops had established control
over the island and seized most of the
Aegean Islands.
The Germans and their allies divided
Greece into zones of occupation. The Bulgarians, who had not participated in the
invasion, took southeastern Macedonia and
most of western Thrace. The Germans
reserved for themselves southern Macedonia, including Thessaloniki, the city of
Athens, a strip of land in Thrace on the
Turkish border, most of Crete, and three
Aegean Islands near Turkey, Chios, Lesbos,
and Samos. The Italians took all of the
remainder, which included the eastern tip
of Crete, most of mainland Greece, and the
Ionian Islands.
Even though the Italians technically controlled most of mainland Greece, the

Germans determined the occupation


government. On 29 April 29, 1941, the Germans appointed General Tsolakoglou to be
the prime minister of the collaborationist
government in Athens. The previous prime
minister, Alexander Koryzes (18851941),
who had succeeded Metaxas, committed
suicide in the wake of Greeces disastrous
defeat. Tsolakoglous position was similar
to that of Henri Pe tain (18561951) in
France and of Milan Nedic (18771946) in
Serbia. Tsolakoglou proved to be an incompetent ruler who garnered little popular support. During his rule, Greece began to
experience food shortages and inflation.
The occupiers looted much food and
material from Greece. The poor condition
of the Greek economy caused the Germans
to replace Tsolakoglou with a civilian economics expert, Konstantinos Logothetopoulos (18781961) on December 2, 1942.
Ioannis Rhallis (18781946) replaced him
on April 7, 1943, and remained in office
until the German withdrawal in October 1944. Cooperation with the Germans,
however, yielded few tangible results. By
the end of 1941, famine gripped the country
due to German expropriation of food resources. As many as 250,000 Greeks died
of starvation during the most intense part of
the famine from 1941 to 1943.
Armed opposition to foreign rule soon
emerged throughout Greece. The resistance
quickly attracted British support. The most
important resistance organization was the
National Liberation Front (EAM). It was
largely guided and led by members of the
Greek Communist Party. In this respect it
was the Greek counterpart of the Yugoslav
Partisan movement. It formed in the fall of
1941. The armed component of EAM was
the National Popular Liberation Army
(ELAS), which was established in December 1942. These two organizations are

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Greece in World War II

usually referred to collectively as EAM/


ELAS. EAM/ELAS was the largest Greek
resistance movement. The main EAM/
ELAS leader was Stephanos Saraphis
(18901957). Because he was not a Communist, he never achieved the dominance
over his organization that Josip Broz Tito
(18921980) enjoyed in Yugoslavia. It operated throughout the country, and appealed
not only to Communists but also to all
those Greeks intent on fighting the foreign
occupation.
The other main resistance movement was
the National Republican Greek League
(EDES). The leader of this nationalist and
royalist organization was Colonel Napoleon
Zervas (1891-1957). It was much smaller
than EAM/ELAS and mainly limited to Epirus. EDES was somewhat analogous to the
Cetnik movement of Dragoljub Mihailovic
(18931946) in Yugoslavia. Even though it
did receive some British aid, its numbers
were too few for it to mount a serious threat
to the occupying forces.
The Axis forces responded to resistance
quickly and ruthlessly to any sign of resistance. The Bulgarians brutally suppressed a
general uprising in southeastern Macedonia
around Drama in September 1941. The Germans and Italians committed atrocities in
their campaigns against resistance fighters.
The Greeks were undeterred by these actions.
Upon entering Greece, the Germans
imposed severe restrictions on the Greek
Jewish community. With the assistance of
the Bulgarians, they deported the Jewish
populations of Salonika, Greek Macedonia,
and Thrace beginning in March 1943. Most
of these died in Auschwitz. After the Italian
surrender of September 1943, the Germans
extended their control to the Italian zones
of mainland Greece. The remaining Greek
Jewish communities from Athens and the
Aegean islands were deported in March

1944. Because of these actions, over 60,000


Greek Jews perished.
When the Italians left the war in September 1943, EAM/ELAS managed to seize
most of their equipment and supplies. By
the end of 1943, EAM/ELAS and EDES
had come into conflict against each other.
EAM/ELAS easily dominated EDES. As a
result, EAM/ELAS established political
control of much of Greece. By 1944 the
Germans and the collaborationist government only maintained a presence in the
major cities and in the transportation routes
linking them. After the defection of Bulgaria
and Romania to the Allies in the fall of
1944, the German position in Greece
became impossible to sustain. In October 1944, German forces began a systematic
retreat out of the country. As they left,
EAM/ELAS spread its control throughout
Greece.
In the wake of the German withdrawal, the British army landed in Athens
on October 18, 1944, with a number of
anti-Communist Greek politicians in tow.
They intended to ensure that the Communist
EAM/ELAS movement would not establish
a postwar government. A pro-EAM/ELAS
mutiny among Greek Royalist forces stationed in the Middle East had alerted
the British to the danger of a Communist
takeover of Greece. Initially EAM/ELAS
cooperated with the British, but by December 1944, this had ended. Athens became
the arena of heavy fighting between EAM/
ELAS forces and the British. A number of
collaborationists eager to redeem themselves supported the British. As many as
10,000 people died in this Battle of Athens.
A cease fire on January 11, 1945, ended the
fighting but not the hostility. Outright civil
war began anew the next year between
British supported Royalist forces and the
Communist-led antigovernment guerillas.

Greek Civil War

World War II had a devastating effect on


Greece. As many as 500,000 people died
from starvation, actions of the occupiers of
civil strife. Much of the infrastructure was
damaged. Three more years of heavy fighting in the Greek Civil War loomed before
peace would finally come to Greece.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Greece, Invasion of, 1941; Greek
Civil War; Metaxas, Ioannis (18711941);
Tsolakoglou, Georgios (18861948)

Further Reading
Clogg, Richard. A Concise History of Greece.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
1992.
Mazower, Mark. Hitlers Europe: How the
Nazis Ruled Europe. New York: Penguin,
2008.
Mazower, Mark. Inside Hitlers Greece. New
Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1993.
Stavrianos, L. S. The Balkans since 1453. New
York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1958.

Greek Civil War


The Greek Civil War was fought between
Greek Communists and non-Communist
military organizations during the period
19421949. In April 1941, the Germans
occupied Greece. Greek king George II
(18901947) and his government left and
established a government-in-exile in Egypt.
The German occupation led to the formation
of several resistance movements by late
1941, including the National Liberation
Front (EAM), founded in September 1941
by the Communist Party of Greece (KKE);
the liberal Greek National Republican
League (EDES); and the National and Social
Liberation (EKKA). The largest group was
the EAM and its military wing, the Greek
National Liberation Army (ELAS). As a

broad democratic republican movement


against fascism, the EAM quickly won the
support of many non-Communists.
Between 1942 and 1944, left-wing and
right-wing resistance groups fought the Germans, and, by the end of 1943, ELAS with
about 20,000 men controlled much of
northern Greece and had limited German
control to the main towns and connecting
roads. EDES had about 5,000 men, almost
all of them in Epirus. EKKA only had
about 1,000 men.
Each resistance group accused the others
of collaborating with the Germans, leading to
a fratricidal conflict to establish the leadership
of the Greek resistance. ELAS units burned
villages and executed suspected collaborators
and, in spring 1944, destroyed the EKKA. In
October 1943, ELAS attacked the EDES,
precipitating open conflict until a Britishsponsored cease-fire in February 1944.
In March 1944, the EAM, controlling
much of the country, established the Political Committee of National Liberation
(PEEA), essentially a third Greek government. In May 1944, representatives from all
political groups met in Lebanon and formed
a government of national unity, mainly
because Joseph Stalin (18791953), the
Soviet leader, directed the KKE to avoid
harming Allied unity. George Papandreou
(18881968) became its prime minister.
By autumn 1944, with the Soviet army
advancing into Romania, the Germans
began withdrawing from Greece. British
troops, commanded by General Ronald Scobie (18931969), landed in Greece in early
October, and entered Athens on October 13.
Papandreou followed a few days later. The
king stayed in Cairo, pending a referendum
to decide the future of the monarchy.
The Papandreou government now
attempted to disarm the resistance organizations. Fearing that the disarmament of

129

130

Greek Civil War

Rebels are paraded through the streets of Langadia, east of Salonika, Greece, after capture by
Greek government forces, February 12, 1948. The bloody, five-year Greek Civil War pitted
the Communist Party of Greece (KKE) against U.S.- and British-backed nationalists. (AP Photo)

ELAS, now numbering 50,000, would leave


ELAS defenseless against the right-wing
militias, EAM submitted an alternative
plan. When Papandreou rejected the plan,
EAM withdrew from the government. On
December 1, General Scobie directed the
dissolution of ELAS, but the KKE refused.
On December 3, a large EAM demonstration in Athens led to full-scale fighting
between ELAS and the government. British
forces intervened as the Greek government
had few forces to oppose ELAS. By December 12, ELAS controlled most of Athens and
Piraeus, but the British and government
forces slowly regained control. A December 24 conference, presided over by Winston
Churchill (18741965), the British prime
minister, failed to provide a solution as the
more moderate members felt that the EAM/
ELAS demands were too excessive.
By early January, British and Greek
forces had driven the ELAS from Athens.

Papandreou resigned and General


Nikolaos Plastiras (18831953), a firm
anti-Communist, became prime minister.
On January 15, 1945, Scobie agreed to a
cease-fire in exchange for ELASs withdrawal from Athens and Thessaloniki and
its demobilization in the Peloponnese.
During the fighting in Athens, the KKE
executed up to 8,000 collaborators and
suspected collaborators, and the withdrawing Communists took another 20,000 hostages with them. As a result, support for the
KKE declined, and most of the prominent
non-Communists in EAM left the organization. At the same time, right-wing extremist
gangs executed known and suspected
Communists.
In February 1945, the various Greek factions signed the Varkiza Agreement, which
called for the complete demobilization of
all guerrilla and paramilitary groups,
an amnesty for all political offenses,

Greek Civil War

a referendum on the monarchy, and a general election as soon as possible. The KKE
now changed its objective to peacefully
establishing a peoples democracy. However, the new Greek army and right-wing
extremists continued their war against the
ex-members of EAM. Many ELAS members hid their weapons, and 5,000 escaped
to Yugoslavia.
In February 1946, the KKE, despite the
lack of support from Stalin, renewed armed
struggle in Greece. On March 31, 1946, the
day of the national elections, ELAS veterans, now the Democratic Army of Greece
(DSE), infiltrated into Greece from Albania
and Yugoslavia and attacked Litochoro. By
late 1946, the DSE had about 10,000 fighters, mainly in the mountains of northern
Greece. Average Greek citizens found themselves between DSE fighters who killed
members of right-wing gangs and these
gangs and the army who imprisoned
and killed Communists and Communist
sympathizers.
In 1947, the DSE launched large-scale
attacks across northern Epirus, Thessaly,
and Macedonia, and the army responded
with massive counteroffensives. However,
when the army arrived, the DSE fighters
had melted back into the mountains and
their safe havens in Albania and Yugoslavia.
In December 1947, the KKE formed a Provisional Democratic Government and
moved to full-scale conventional war in an
attempt to seize a major town as its seat of
government.
In response, the government banned the
KKE, suppressed its press, cracked down
on KKE members and sympathizers, and
increased the size of the army. In December 1947, the DSE lost 1,200 fighters in a
major battle around Konitsa. Still, the DSE,
with about 20,000 fighters and a network of
sympathizers and informants across Greece,

had extended its operations to the Peloponnesus and close to Athens.


By 1947, the Greek army had grown to
90,000 men with British training, equipment,
and money. When Britain announced that it
could no longer afford this burden, President
Harry S. Truman (18841972) announced
that the United States would now assist
Greece. By early 1948, American money,
advisers, and equipment had begun to arrive
in Greece, enabling the Greek army to launch
a series of major offensives in central Greece.
These offensives inflicted some serious
defeats on the DSE, raising army morale and
lowering the morale of the DSE.
Until 1948, Yugoslav leader Josip Broz
Tito (18921980), loyal to Stalin, had supported the DSE. In June 1948, the Soviet
Union broke off relations with Yugoslavia,
but the DSE leaders chose to remain loyal
to Stalin. In July 1949, Tito closed the
Yugoslavian-Greek border to the DSE guerrillas and disbanded their camps inside
Yugoslavia. The split with Tito led to a
witch hunt for Tito sympathizers inside the
KKE, leading to disorganization and demoralization within the DSE and a decline of
support for the KKE.
In August 1949, the new commander of
the Greek army, General Alexander Papagos
(18831955), launched a major offensive
against DSE forces in northern Greece,
resulting in heavy DSE losses. By September 1949, most of its fighters had surrendered or escaped into Albania, but the
Albanian government now prohibited DSE
military operations from Albanian territory.
On October 16, the KKE agreed to a ceasefire that ended the civil war.
Although the Greek government had prevented a Communist takeover, the civil war
left Greece with a legacy of political division and personal animosities, extensive
devastation, deep economic problems, client

131

132

Greek Military Coup, 1909

status to the United States, and suspicions of


its northern neighbors, which lasted into the
1980s. Yet, unlike Albania and Yugoslavia,
Greece did not undergo 40 years of Communist rule and its attendant consequences. The
West hailed the end of the civil war as an
early victory in the Cold War, although Stalin had not actively supported the Communist insurgency in Greece.
Robert B. Kane
See also: EAM/ELAS; Greece in World War II

Further Reading
Averoff-Tossizza, Evangelos. By Fire and Axe:
The Communist Party and the Civil War in
Greece, 19441949. New Rochelle, NY:
Caratzas Brothers, 1978.
Kousoulas, D. George. Revolution and Defeat:
The Story of the Greek Communist Party.
London: Oxford University Press, 1965.
Leeper, Reginald. When Greek Meets Greek.
London: Chatto and Windus, 1950.

Greek Military Coup, 1909


Also known as the Goudi Coup, for the
Athenian neighborhood where it began,
the Greek military coup of 1909 initiated
the division between liberal republican
forces and conservative monarchal forces
that marked Greek politics through much of
the twentieth century.
The Greek military had been humiliated
by its rapid defeat in the war against the
Ottoman Empire in 1897 and by its lack of
success in irregular operations in Macedonia. The leaders of the 1909 coup were
members of the Military League, who
sought to emulate the Young Turk coup the
year before. They wanted to modernize the
military and adopt a more aggressive foreign
policy. They also sought to limit the role of
the monarchy in the military.

They initiated their actions on August 14,


1909, in the Goudi Barracks with a set of
demands sent to the government. The situation stalemated for the next several weeks.
A decisive figure in the person of Eleutherios Venizelos (18641936), the prime minister of autonomous Crete, then went to
Athens in December 1909 to resolve the
situation. Only the next year, when new
elections were held in August and a
government came into being in October,
was the Greek political situation resolved.
Venizelos represented a republican sensibility and advocated an active foreign policy.
Nevertheless, he endeavored not to antagonize conservative and royalist elements in
the military and politics. He introduced a
new constitution and initiated diplomatic
contacts with the Bulgarian government that would lead to the formation of the
Balkan League.
The British and French sent missions to
reorganize respectively the Greek navy and
army. The Greek military coup of 1909 led
to the participation of Greece in the Balkan
Wars and the national schism of World War
I. Echoes of this issue resounded through
the Greek Civil War of 19451949 and the
Greek military coup of 1967.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Greco-Ottoman War, 1897; Greek
Civil War; Venize los, Eleuthe rios (1864
1936)

Further Reading
Clogg, Richard. A Concise History of Greece.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
1992.
Papacosma, S. Victor. The Military in Greek
Politics: The 1909 Coup dEtat. Kent, OH:
Kent State University Press, 1977.
Stavrianos, L. S. The Balkans since 1453.
New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston,
1958.

Greek War of Independence, 18211832

Greek War of Independence,


18211832
A revolt against the Ottoman Empire, the
Greek War of Independence from 1821 to
1832 culminated in the creation of an independent Greece under the protection of
European powers.
By the sixteenth century, the Ottoman
Empire was in control of Asia Minor and the
majority of the Balkan region, including
Greece. Although many Greek professionals
preferred to remain under Ottoman rule, a
class of dedicated independence enthusiasts
agitated for a separate Greek state. Greek
writers in the late eighteenth century began
to express a sense of Greek national identity
in their work. The popular author Rhigas
Velestinlis stirred his generation to revolt by
clamoring for a war of liberation for all Balkan people. All were influenced by both the
American Revolution and the French Revolution that had taken place decades earlier.
In 1814, professional Greek merchants
began to establish societies geared toward
the liberation of Greece. Backed by Russia,
such groups as the Filiki Etairia (Friendly
SocietyFE) became more popular as the
Ottoman Empire attempted to crack down
on political dissent. FE, led by Alexander
Ypsilantis, who served as a Greek military
liaison to the czar in Moscow, claimed to
have the full backing of the Russian state.
Unable to stem the tide of revolution, the
Ottomans watched as Ypsilantis orchestrated an abortive revolt on March 6, 1821.
FE troops marched into the Danubian principalities in the hope of starting a full-scale
uprising in the Balkans. The movement stimulated the outbreak of other localized revolts in
the region against the rule of Sultan Mahmud
II (17921828). The latter had sought to
enhance imperial authority at the expense of

sovereignty for local villages. In response,


groups in the Peloponnesus and western
Greece (Rumeli) rose against their local
Islamic ruler Ali Pasha (17441822) in April.
The Greeks proclaimed their independence
at Epidauros on January 13, 1822, after an
earlier uprising in Morea. Lacking military
hardware and political unity, the independence movement managed to survive initial
reprisals and form a more united revolutionary government. In 1822, a national
assembly was created, followed by regional
assemblies. By mid-1822, Greek forces had
achieved great success. They now held most
of the Peloponnesus, including the islands of
Hydra, Spetses, and Psara, as well as an area
north of the Gulf of Corinth. That region
included the important cities of Athens,
Thebes, and Mesolonghi.
The Greeks fought the Turkish armies of
the Ottoman sultan alone until 1825. In February that year, the sultans troops were aided by
the Egyptian Army of Muhammad Ali (1769
1849) and regained control of continental
Greece. In response, the governments of the
United Kingdom, Russia, and France demanded the withdrawal of the Egyptians and an
armistice with the sultan with the Treaty of
London for Greek Independence (1827).
When Egyptian reinforcements landed at
Navarino, the three allied governments sent
a far larger naval force that destroyed the
Ottoman-Egyptian fleet in the Battle of
Navarino on October 20, 1827. The involvement of European powers in the independence war, particularly Russia and Great
Britain, convinced Ottoman rulers to tolerate the new Greek independence movement
or face a trade cutoff. In 1828, one of the
many Russo-Ottoman Wars helped to hasten
Greek independence.
The independence of Greece was guaranteed by its allies in the London Protocol

133

134

Greens (Montenegro)

of 1830, although fighting and political turmoil continued for a few more years. Greece
finally emerged as a sovereign political state
in 1833 under Otto of Bavaria, a monarch
approved by its allies.
Jason Newman
See also: Navarino, Battle of, 1827; Ypsilantis
(18151867), Alexander (17921828)

Further Reading
Clogg, Richard. A Concise History of Greece.
New York: Cambridge University Press,
2002.
Dakin, Douglas. The Greek Struggle for
Independence. Berkeley: University of
California Press, 1973.
Paroulakis, Peter. The Greeks: Their Struggle
for Independence. Darwin, Australia:
Hellenic International Press, 1984.
Woodhouse, C. M. Modern Greece: A Short
History. 5th ed. Boston: Faber and Faber,
1991.

Greens (Montenegro)
The Greens (zelenasi) were Montenegrins
who opposed unification with Serbia in the
new Serb, Croat, and Slovene state in 1918.
The name came from ballots used in the voting for the Grand National Assembly in Pogdorica in November 1918. Those who
favored Montenegrin separatism marked
green ballots, while those who wanted union
with the new South Slav state used white ballots. The Whites won overwhelmingly, in part
due to the occupation of the country by the
Serbian army. The losers, who then were
mainly rural and tribal, rebelled at the beginning of 1919. They besieged Cetinje but
lacked the arms and numbers to prevail
against Whites and their Serbian allies. This
so-called Christmas Rebellion, which took
place during the Serbian Orthodox Christmas
season, soon collapsed. The Greens continued

to insist that Montenegrins and Serbs were


separate peoples. During the interwar period,
they pressed for Montenegrin autonomy
within the Yugoslav state.
When the Italians invaded Montenegro in
April 1941, some Greens collaborated with
them. There was a dynastic connection
between Italy and Montenegro. The queen
of Italy, Elena (18731952), was the daughter of the last Montenegrin king Nikola
(18411921). By the end of 1941, the Italians found that cooperation with the betterarmed and more numerous C etniks was
more effective. This undercut the activities
of the Greens. After the Germans replaced
the Italians in occupying Montenegro in
September 1943, some Green elements continued to cooperate. Many of them withdrew
with the Germans a year later.
The Yugoslav Wars of 19911995 revived
the Green cause. Under the leadership of
Milo Djukanovic (1962), Montenegro
gradually separated itself from the destructive Serbian nationalist policies of Slobodan
Milosevic (19412006). After a referendum
passed on May 21, 2006, Montenegro realized the Green program and declared
independence on June 3, 2006.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Italy in the Balkans during World
War II; Montenegro in World War I; Nikola,
King of Montenegro (18411921); Yugoslavia, Collaborationist Forces in World War II

Further Reading
Banac, Ivo. The National Question in Yugoslavia: Origins, History, Politics. Ithaca,
NY: Cornell University Press, 1984.
Roberts, Elizabeth. Realm of the Black Mountain: A History of Montenegro. Ithaca, NY:
Cornell University Press, 2007.
Tomasevich, Jozo. War and Revolution in
Yugoslavia, 19411945. Stanford, CA:
Stanford University Press, 2001.

H
Handschar SS Division

the ostensibly independent Croatian


government, led by Ante Pavelic (1889
1959). The Croatian government initially
had problems with the idea but eventually
agreed on March 5, 1943. By mid-1943, the
division numbered 26,000 men, including
2,800 Catholic Croats.
The new division was officially designated as the 13 SS Frei.Gebirgs Division
(kroatien). It received its full name, 13
Waffen-Gebirgs-Division der SS Handschar
(kroatische Nr. 1), in May 1944. The division
had two infantry regiments, an artillery regiment, a reconnaissance company, a panzerjager
company, an antiaircraft company, a pioneer
battalion, and other support units. The division
had three commanders during the war: Standartenfuhrer Herbert von Obwurzer (18881945),
March 9, 1943August 1, 1943; Oberfuhrer
Karl-Gustav Sauberzweig (18991946),
August 1, 1943June 1, 1944; and Oberfuhrer
Desiderius Hampel (18951981), June 1,
1944May 8, 1945.
The members of the Handschar Division
wore the regular SS uniform with a divisional collar patch showing an arm, holding a
scimitar over a swastika; a Croatian armshield (red-white chessboard) on the left
arm; the oval mountain troop Edelweiss
patch on the right arm; and the Muslim fez
in field gray (normal service) or red (walking out) with the SS eagle and deaths head
emblazoned. Non-Muslim members could
wear the standard SS mountain cap.
By September 1943, the completed division had arrived in occupied France for its
initial training. At Villefranche, some

This unit was a mountain infantry division


of the Waffen SS, consisting mostly of Muslim Bosnians; the first non-German Waffen
SS division during World War II. The name
came from the curved Turkish scimitar
(Handschar in German), a historic symbol
of Bosnia.
On April 6, 1941, the German army
invaded Yugoslavia and quickly occupied
the country. The Germans established the
pro-Nazi independent state of Croatia,
including Bosnia-Herzegovina, whose
population consisted of Catholic Croats,
Orthodox Serbs, and Muslim Croats and
occupied portions of Slovenia and Serbia.
Italy, Bulgaria, Hungary, and Italiancontrolled Albania occupied other portions
of the former Yugoslavia.
SS-Reichsfuehrer Heinrich Himmler
(19001945), fascinated by Islam and
believing Muslims to be fearless warriors,
targeted the Muslims of Bosnia for a Croatian SS division. Later, about 10 percent
of the future divisions men would be
Catholic Croats. Himmler also believed that
the Croats were of Aryan, not Slavic,
descent, making them racially acceptable
for the SS. Finally, the Nazis hoped to use
the creation of a Muslim SS division as
the first step in gaining the support of the
worlds 350 million Muslims against the
Western Allies.
To form the division, Himmler, on February 13, 1943, obtained Adolf Hitlers approval. Himmler also needed the approval of

135

136

Herzegovina Revolt, 1875

malcontents, led by three Communists who


had infiltrated the division, mutinied and killed
five German officers. The majority of the
troops did not participate in the rebellion, and,
in fact, either had no idea that the mutiny had
occurred or actively helped suppress it. The
Germans executed 14 soldiers as mutineers.
The division completed its training in
Silesia by mid-February 1944 and returned
to Bosnia for action against Josef Titos Partisans. Operating in northeastern Bosnia,
western Serbia, and southern Sirmium, the
division participated in several anti-Partisan
operations. With the advance of the Soviet
army to the Croatian border in late 1944, the
division transferred to southern Hungary and
fought as a front-line unit. Many Muslims
now deserted and returned to Bosnia to protect their homes and families. The remaining
men fought valiantly against overwhelming
odds but were slowly driven out of Hungary
into Austria. The remnants of the division surrendered to British troops on May 8, 1945.
Postwar Yugoslavian authorities extradited
38 officers, mostly German and Yugoslav
Volksdeutsche, for trial as war criminals and
executed 10 of them.
Robert B. Kane
See also: Partisans, Yugoslavia; Pavelic, Ante
(18891959); Ustasa

Further Reading
Bishop, Chris. Waffen-SS Divisions, 193945.
London: Amber Books, 2007.
Blandford, Edmund L. Hitlers Second Army:
The Waffen SS. Osceola, WI: Motorbooks
International, 1994.
Herf, Jeffrey. Nazi Propaganda for the Arab
World. New Haven, CT: Yale University
Press, 2009.
Mousavizadeh, Nader. The Black Book of
Bosnia: The Consequences of Appeasement. New York: Basic Books, 1996.

Herzegovina Revolt, 1875


The most significant rebellion in Herzegovina against the Ottoman Empire occurred
in mid-June 1875 because of the harsh treatment by the Bosnian rulers of the Ottoman
province of Bosnia of the mostly Catholic
and Orthodox population.
In the 1870s, the Ottoman sultan Abdul
Mecid I (18231861) announced a number
of reforms that included new rights for the
empires Christian subjects, a new basis for
army conscription, and an end to the hated
tax-farming system. However, the powerful
Bosnian landowners either resisted or
ignored the reforms. These landowners
often instituted more repressive measures,
which included a steadily increasing tax burden, against their Christian subjects.
On June 19, 1875, the Catholics in the
Gabela and Hrasno districts of lower Herzegovina, ignited by overtaxing, rebelled
against the Ottoman authorities. On July 9,
Orthodox Christians around the village of
Nevesinje in eastern Herzegovina also
rebelled. A general uprising of the entire
Christian population in Bosnia and Herzegovina subsequently ensued. More than
150,000 people took refuge in Croatia. The
Ottomans responded with both government
troops under the recently appointed Bosnian
governor and irregular troops led by local
landowners.
Because the Ottoman authorities could not
suppress the uprisings, the unrest quickly
spread to the Christian populations of the
other Ottoman provinces in the Balkans. The
Ottoman military committed many atrocities
during its attempts to suppress the unrest in
the Balkan provinces. These atrocities led to
Russian intervention in the Balkans to protect
the Slavic Orthodox population and the
Russo-Ottoman War of 18771878. Russia

The Holocaust in the Balkans

defeated the Ottoman Empire and imposed


significant losses of Ottoman territory in the
Balkans with the March 1878 Treaty of San
Stefano. Concerned about the establishment
of an independent great Bulgaria, Otto von
Bismarck (18151898), the prime minister of
Germany, called a European conference in
Berlin the following July to rewrite the original treaty. The new Treaty of Berlin still
severely reduced Ottoman territories and
power in Europe but allowed AustriaHungary to occupy and govern Bosnia and
Herzegovina, although the provinces nominally remained under Ottoman sovereignty.
Austria-Hungary officially annexed the province in 1908.
Robert B. Kane
See also: Berlin, Treaty of, 1878; Bosnian
Crisis, 19081909; Russo-Ottoman War,
18771878; San Stefano, Treaty of, 1878

Further Reading
Aksanok, Virginia. Ottoman Wars, 1700
1870: An Empire Besieged. Harlow, UK:
Pearson Longman, 2007.
Miller, William. The Ottoman Empire and Its
Successors, 18011927. London: Cambridge University Press, 1936.
Palmer, Alan. The Decline and Fall of the
Ottoman Empire. New York: M. Evan and
Company, 1972.
Shaw, Stanford J., and Ezul Kural Shaw. History
of the Ottoman Empire and Modern Turkey.
Vol. 2, Reform, Reaction and Republic:
The Rise of Modern Turkey, 18081975.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
1977.

The Holocaust in the Balkans


The Holocaust primarily refers to Nazi
Germanys effort to destroy Europes nine
million Jews. In the end, under the direction
of German chancellor Adolf Hitler (1933

1945), six million Jews were murdered. It


was an act of genocide, an attempt to fully
eliminate, through state-sponsored, systematic murder, an entire group of people.
Although the Jews were the principal target,
the Holocaust also involved the deaths of
others, namely those deemed by the Nazis
to be destructive to the fabric of German
society, including gypsies, the mentally and
physically disabled, homosexuals, and
political dissidents. During World War II,
the Nazi policy toward the Jews became
known as the Final Solution. It was called
this for it was their desire to put to an
end, once and for all, the age-old Jewish
Question, the Judenfrage, in Europe. The
solution involved complete and total extermination of European Jewry. During the
invasion of the Soviet Union in June 1941,
the implementation of the policy began.
The majority of the killing was done by the
German SS and mobile killing units known
as the Einsatzgruppen. Initially, the annihilation effort involved random, uneven acts
of violence. During 1942, the Nazis constructed death camps in Poland to facilitate
and effectuate the killing process. As the
Nazis advanced across Europe, they were
assisted in committing mass death by nonGerman collaborators.
Earlier in 1941, the German army moved
to the southeast. The Germans and Italians
attacked Yugoslavia and Greece. Romania
and Bulgaria had already joined the Axis
Powers. Jewish communities in the Balkan
region were subsequently at risk for discrimination, ghettoization, deportation, and
extermination. The fate of the Balkan Jews
during the Holocaust was similar to that of
Jews elsewhere. There were varying levels
of protection and persecution in the region.
On the whole, the fate of individual Jews in
the Balkan countries was often more secure
than in Central and Eastern Europe, where

137

138

The Holocaust in the Balkans

Bulgarian policemen oversee the deportation in Skopje, Yugoslavia, of Macedonian Jews to


the German death camps in March 1943 in Bulgaria-occupied Skopje. (AP Photo/U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, Courtesy of Jewish Historical Museum, Belgrade)

their numbers were larger. While still tragic,


many Jews from this area of Europe were
saved due to the noncooperation of their
governments or fellow citizens with the
German orders for deportation and extermination. Violence by angry mobs and betrayal
of Jewish communities was less common
here, although there were still occurrences
of such behavior.

Albania
Albania, unlike other European countries,
had a Muslim majority. It was also a country
that actively sought to protect the Jewish
population within its borders. Compared
with Jewish communities in neighboring
countries, Albanias Jewish population was
very small. In 1937, the Jewish population
numbered around 300.
In Albania, the Italian occupation
regime proactively safeguarded its citizens,

including Jews. The government additionally accepted Jewish refugees from neighboring nations. This protection continued to
some degree after September 1943, when
the Italians withdrew from the war and
German units occupied Albania. The local
population protected many Jews. Albanians
treated them as part of the wider community
and regarded Jewish refugees who came to
their country as guests. The inclusion and
protection of Jews was compatible with the
Albanian customs of hospitality, known as
Besa. Around 2,000 Jews survived the war
in Albania

Bulgaria
Bulgaria joined the Axis powers in 1941 to
allow Germany passage to Greece in return
for an annexation of former territory from
neighboring Greece and Yugoslavia. At the
time, less than 1 percent of Bulgarias

The Holocaust in the Balkans

population was Jewish, about 50,000


55,000 persons. The majority of those lived
in the capital city of Sofia.
Unlike many other European countries,
Bulgaria did not have a significant problem
with anti-Semitism historically. Nevertheless,
anti-Jewish legislation was implemented in
1940, but the impact was generally less
harsh. Economic and social restrictions were
imposed on the Jewish community. To minimize Jewish concentration in urban centers,
many Jews were dispersed throughout the
country. Some Jewish men of working age
were deported to slave-labor camps within
the country, but none to death camps. Due to
a shortage of medical personnel during the
war, Jewish doctors and pharmacists were
allowed to be released from labor camps and
given assignments in Bulgarian territories.
Some leniency for converts to Christianity
and for Jewish war veterans was also provided. Bulgarians did enact a law that
required Jews to wear a plastic yellow button,
but that law was revoked quickly.
In 1944, the Bulgarians overturned their
anti-Jewish laws after years of resisting
pressure from the Germans to deport their
Jews. The Bulgarian Jews were largely
spared. The Jews of Bulgaria were considered Bulgarian by their government. The
Bulgarian Orthodox Church also protested
anti-Jewish treatment. This explains why so
few lives were lost. Those who were killed,
were killed because they were of a differing
nationality. In 1943, Jews from the annexed
territories, including Thrace in Greece and
Macedonia in Yugoslavia, were deported by
the Bulgarian government to Treblinka and
were all subsequently murdered at the
death camp.
Today, however, there remain few Jews in
Bulgaria. More than 40,000 Bulgarian Jews
immigrated to Israel after World War II and
the establishment of a Communist government.

Greece
Jews had been in Greece since ancient
times. At the time of World War II, the Jewish population of Greece numbered about
76,000. About 3,500 Jews lived in the
capital of Athens and about 2,000 on the
island of Corfu. There was also an old
Sephardic settlement in Salonika (Thessaloniki) of about 55,000 that could trace its origins to the fifteenth century.
The Greek Jewish community was very
traditional, with little formal education and
large, close-knit families. Most Jews were
employed in professions involving trade
and commerce and spoke Ladino. Despite
increasing anti-Semitic propaganda, about
13,000 Jews fought in the Greek army at
the time of the German invasion. The area
of Salonika was occupied by German forces
that were fully intent on the destruction of
the Jewish community there.
Restrictions on the Jewish community in
Greece began in July 1942 with the introduction of forced labor and ghettoization.
The Germans were able to subdue the Jewish population by promising them relocation
to Poland, offering them Polish money, and
convincing their chief rabbi to go along
with German orders to save their lives.
After the deportations began, over 60,000
Jews were killed, mostly at Auschwitz,
exterminated in the gas chambers. The process began immediately upon arrival.
Putting up a strong resistance to the Germans, the internal population of Greece was
less likely to aid in the Final Solution than in
other locations. In Athens, Greeks assisted
local Jewish leaders in disappearing into the
mountains. Others were able to survive by
joining the Greek resistance movement.
Some avoided it through intermarriage with
non-Jews. Yad Vashem lists 313 Greeks
amongst the righteous gentiles for their efforts
to save the Jews. Among the notable was

139

140

The Holocaust in the Balkans

Archbishop Damaskinos Papandreou (1891


1949) of Athens. He spoke out on behalf of
Greeces Jewish citizens. He encouraged his
fellow Greeks to do all they could to protect
them, to hide them, and to aid their escape.
Quoting the Apostle Paul, he publicly proclaimed, In our national consciousness, all
the children of Mother Greece are an inseparable unity: they are equal members of the
national body irrespective of religion . . . Our
holy religion does not recognize superior or
inferior qualities based on race or religion, as
it is stated: There is neither Jew nor Greek.
Despite his courageous efforts, between 80
and 90 percent of Greek Jews were murdered
in the Final Solution. Greece, in fact, suffered
one of the highest percentages of losses of its
Jewish population during World War II.

Romania
Romania had one of the largest Jewish
populations in Europe at the start of World
War II. It had a population of over 700,000.
According to the 2004 International
Commission on the Holocaust in Romania
Final Report, which was prepared under the
direction of Elie Wiesel (1928), a Holocaust survivor from Sighetu Marmatiei in
Transylvania, approximately 280,000 to
380,000 Jews died in Romania or in lands
controlled by Romania. Under the dictatorship of General Ion Antonescu (1882
1946), Romania enthusiastically participated in the elimination of its Jewish population and Jewish communities in occupied
territories. As in other countries, Jews were
first subjected to anti-Semitic legislation
and then received harsher treatment. Beginning in 1940, laws were passed to start the
process of removing Jews from the economy
and from national life. Jews were expelled
from government service, schools, and the
arts. Legislation was also enacted to provide
for Romanian control over Jewish personal

and commercial property. Religious properties, including synagogues, cemeteries, and


residences for rabbis, were seized. Jewish
agricultural properties were seized and turned
over to the state and then Jews were expelled
from rural areas. Skilled Jews were used to
train Romanian workers, but unskilled Jews
were not as lucky. They were made to work
in labor camps under difficult conditions.
Non-Jewish Romanians were permitted by
law to take any Jewish living quarters they
desired as their own. Jews were prohibited
from marrying non-Jews and prohibited from
having Romanian names. At one point, Jews
were even prohibited from converting to
Christianity. These were facets of the larger
program of homogenizing Romanias people
known as Romanianization and protecting
Romanian blood.
In addition to state-sanctioned discrimination, Romanias Jews were subjected to
sporadic violence and pogroms. The Bucharest pogrom of January 1941 resulted in the
murder of about 120 Jews. Later, in
June 1941, several thousand Jews were
killed in the Iasi pogrom. Many Romanian
Jews were deported to Transnistria in the
western Ukraine. Many died of starvation
and disease. Others were simply massacred.
What Jewish life remained in Romania
was difficult and desperate. In a curious
turn, Antonescu refused to comply with
German orders to deport Romanias Jews to
the death camps. Although a confirmed
anti-Semite, it appeared he had his own
agenda and was not prepared to follow the
orders of an invading government. In this
regard, many Romanian Jews escaped a
worse fate.

Yugoslavia
Yugoslavia originally tried to preserve its
neutrality. After a pro-German government
was overthrown by pro-British officers,

Horseshoe, Operation, 1998

Germany and Italy invaded the country in


the spring of 1941 and partitioned the country. Macedonia was given to Bulgaria to
control, while Croatia was a German satellite that was created by the German
government. The Croatian government was
an extremist, nationalist government that
served at the whim of German authority, a
true puppet state ironically called, the Independent State of Croatia.
Consequently, Croatia initiated many of
the discriminatory practices against the
Jews that were found in Germany as soon
as they took power in 1941 and immediately
set in place the mechanisms for genocide.
Jews were forced to wear the yellow Star of
David as in Germany. They believed the
Jews were an inferior race and sought their
destruction. Ultimately defeated by the
Soviets and Yugoslav partisans, the Germans left the country in 1945. Only 76,000
Jews lived in Yugoslavia, which was less
than one-half of 1 percent of the population.
The Jewish community was engaged in
industry, trade, and commerce, with the
Jews in Serbia and Croatia being financially
more successful than in other regions. They
enjoyed full civic and economic freedoms
until the 1930s, when a few laws were
passed restricting their access to higher
education and business licenses.
In Serbia, which had no tradition of antiSemitism prior to the German occupation,
Jews were rounded up by the Germans and
shot by the thousands. By mid-1942, Jews
were eliminated from Serbia. In Croatia,
deportation began in 1942 to Auschwitz,
while some of the Jews were either shot or
died in forced labor camps. Croatia killed
almost 50 percent of its Jewish population
in their own labor camps. About 60,000
Yugoslav Jews perished during this period.
The Macedonian region was under the control of the Bulgarians as part of an

agreement with the Germans and the Jews


living there were deported and perished in
Treblinka.
Bonnie K. Levine-Berggren
See also: Albania in World War II; Bulgaria
in World War II; Greece in World War II;
Romania in World War II; Yugoslavia in
World War II

Further Reading
Dawidowicz, Lucy S. The War against the
Jews, 19331945. New York: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston, 1975.
Hilberg, Raul. The Destruction of the European Jews. New York: Holmes and Meier
Publishers, 1985.
Mojzes, Paul. Balkan Genocides. Lanham,
MD: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers,
2011.
Totten, Samuel, and William S. Parsons, eds.
Centuries of Genocide. 4th ed. New York:
Routledge, 2013.

Horseshoe, Operation, 1998


Operation Horseshoe is the name sometimes
given to the attempt by Serbian armed units
to squeeze the Albanian population out of
most of Kosovo by applying force on three
sides. The Serbian failure in the Yugoslav
Wars and especially the expulsion of most
of the Serbian population from Croatia put
pressure on the Belgrade government to
maintain control of the heavily Albanian
region of Kosovo.
The Kosovo insurgency began in 1996
when a well-armed and well-organized
Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) began to
attack Serbian police and civilians. By
1998, the insurgency had gained control of
considerable territory in Kosovo. The
government of Slobodan Milosevic (1941
2007) undertook a counterattack sometimes
termed Operation Horseshoe. After the

141

142

Hoxha, Enver

expulsion or murder of much of the Kosovo


Albanian population, the Serbian governments intention was then to repopulate
Kosovo with Serbian refugees from Croatia.
The Serbian offensive began on February 28, 1998. Using heavy weapon and air
power, the Serbs drove the KLA back, killing a number of civilians and forcing several
hundred thousand from their homes. Most of
these fled to Albania and Macedonia.
Threats of United Nations sanctions and
NATO airstrikes caused Milosevic to feign
compliance with demands to withdrawal
Serbian forces from Kosovo. At the same
time, Serbian military units continued to
attack Kosovar civilians. Renewed violence
at the beginning of 1999 led the Serbs to
again force the Albanian population from
Kosovo. In response, NATO began on
March 24 its Allied Force air campaign
against Serbian targets in Kosovo and Serbia.
The Serbs forced an additional 200,000
Kosovo Albanians into Albania and Macedonia. Many died in the difficult conditions of
the refugee camps. These expulsions ended
only when NATO ground forces entered
Kosovo two days after Milosevic signed a
peace agreement on June 10, 1999. He was
indicted for war crimes in Kosovo.
Whether Operation Horseshoe began in
February 1998 or in January or March 1999
remains unclear. Whenever it began, or
whether it even really existed, the Serbian
actions associated with Operation Horseshoe remain one of the most notorious
examples of ethnic cleansing in postWorld
War II European history. Overall at least
300,000 Kosovo Albanians were displaced
during this time.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Milosevic, Slobodan (19412006);
Yugoslav Wars, 19911995, Consequences

Further Reading
Judah, Tim, Kosovo: War and Revenge. New
Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2000.
Thomas, N., and K. Mikulan. The Yugoslav
Wars (2), Bosnia, Kosovo and Macedonia
19922001, Botely, Oxford: Osprey, 2006.
Wolfgram, Mark A. Operation Horseshoe Did
Not Exist. http://www8.georgetown
.edu/cct/apsa/papers/wolfgram.doc.

Hoxha, Enver (19081985)


Founder of the Albanian Communist Party
and Albanian head of state (19441985),
Enver Hoxha was born on October 16,
1908, in Gjinokaster, Albania. Hoxha studied at a French secondary school in Korce,
Albania, and then at the University of
Montpellier in France. While in France, he
began writing for a Communist newspaper.
In 1934, he became a secretary in the
Albanian consulate in Brussels, but his consular appointment was canceled in 1936
because of articles he wrote criticizing the
Albanian monarchy. He then returned to
Albania to teach French in Korce.
In 1939, the Italian army invaded Albania,
ousted the monarchy, and established a puppet regime. Hoxha was fired from his teaching position for refusing to join the Albanian
Fascist Party. He opened a retail tobacco
store in Tirana that also served as a front
for his Communist activities. In 1940, he
became the founder and head of the Albanian Communist Party, also serving as editor
of the partys newspaper.During World War
II, Hoxha assembled a guerrilla force of
70,000 men that fought the occupying
Italian army and then the Germans who
arrived to assist their ally. In 1944, the
Italians withdrew their forces from Albania.
Soon thereafter, the Communists established

Hoxha, Enver

a provisional Albanian government in October 1944 with Hoxha as prime minister and
defense minister.
The Western Allies recognized this
government in 1945, expecting that Albania
would later hold free elections. When elections were held and the Communists were
the only candidates, Great Britain and the
United States rescinded their recognition.
The countrys leaders proclaimed a Peoples
Republic in Albania in January 1946.
Yugoslav Communists had assisted their
Albanian comrades during the war, and the
two states engaged in a monetary and customs union after World War II. Suspicious
of his neighbors desires to make Albania a
province of Yugoslavia, however, Hoxha
cut all ties with Yugoslavia in 1948. That
same year, he renamed the Albanian Communist Party the Workers Party. He relinquished the premiership to Mehmet Shehu
in 1954 but remained in control as head of
the party with the title of first secretary.
In 1961, Hoxha cut his nations ties
with the Soviet Union in response to Soviet
leader Nikita Khrushchevs (18941971) deStalinization campaign. At about the same
time, the Soviet Union severed relations with
the Peoples Republic of China (PRC).
Hoxha then began relying on the PRC for
economic support, viewing Mao Zedong

(18931976) as the only true Stalinist remaining in power. Shortly after Maos death in
1976, relations between China and Albania
began to cool as Hoxha criticized the new
Chinese leadership. The PRC ended all assistance programs to Albania in 1978.
As Hoxhas health declined in the late
1970s, preparations began for a succession
of leadership. In 1980, he appointed Ramiz
Alia (19252011) as the partys first secretary, bypassing longtime premier Mehmet
Shehu (19131981). Hoxha tried to persuade Shehu to step aside voluntarily.
When this failed, he had the Politburo
publicly rebuke Shehu, who allegedly
committed suicide in 1981. Hoxha died
in Tirana on April 11, 1985, his nation the
most cut off from the outside world in all
Europe.
John David Rausch Jr.
See also: Albania in World War II; Partisans,
Albania; Yugoslav-Soviet Split

Further Reading
Halliday, Jon, ed. The Artful Albanian: Memoirs of Enver Hoxha. London: Chatto and
Windus, 1986.
Orizio, Riccardo. Talk of the Devil: Encounters with Seven Dictators. Translated by
Avril Bardoni. New York: Walker, 2002.

143

I
Ilinden Uprising, 1903

to appeals for help. The Great Powers


applied pressure to force Bulgaria to remain
inactive. Also, the Sofia government was
reluctant to support a movement that it did
not directly control. As a result, the revolt
sputtered through September. By October,
it was over. Casualties were high. As many
as 8,816 men, women, and children perished
in the revolt, 200 villages were burned, and
30,000 refugees fled, mainly to Bulgaria.
The revolt was ill conceived, ill timed,
and ill led. Nevertheless, it had several
important consequences. In the aftermath
of the revolt, the Austro-Hungarians and
Russians reached the so-called Mu rzteg
agreement. At a hunting lodge in Murzteg
Styria, Austro-Hungarian emperor Franz
Joseph (18301916) and Russian tsar
Nicholas II (18611918) reaffirmed the
status quo in the Balkans and sanctioned a
largely stillborn reform program for the
European provinces of the Ottoman Empire.
The Ilinden Uprising also motivated the
Sofia government to strengthen its position
in the Balkans so that it could respond
more directly to a future revolt. In 1904,
Bulgaria and Serbia reached an economic
and political agreement. While this proved
to be transient, in 1912, they formed the
alliance that served the basis for the First
Balkan War. This war ended Ottoman rule
in almost all of Europe. Finally, modern
Macedonian historiography recognizes the
Ilinden Uprising as an import effort for
national identity and independence carried
out by Macedonians as distinct from
Bulgarians.
Richard C. Hall

The Ilinden, or St. Elijahs Day, Uprising


took place in Ottoman-ruled Macedonia
and Thrace in August 1903. It is sometimes
called the Ilinden-Preobrazhenski (St.
Elijahs DayTransfiguration Feast Day)
uprising because it began on St. Elijah Day,
August 2 according to the old calendar
(August 15, new style); and because on
August 6 (August 19, new style), a republic
was proclaimed at Krushevo in the Ottoman
province of Monastir (Bitola) in Macedonia
and a revolt erupted in the Ottoman province
of Adrianople.
In 1893, the predecessor of the Internal
Macedonian Revolutionary Organization
(VMRO) was founded in Salonika. It established cells throughout Macedonia in
order to prepare for a general uprising. The
uprising began on Ilinden, August 3. In
Krushevo, a Republic of Krushevo was
proclaimed. On August 6, pro-Bulgarian
elements in the Adrianople province
revolted and proclaimed a Republic of
Strandzha, named after the local mountain
range. Initially the rebels enjoyed some
local success. Undoubtedly most of the
Slavic-speaking Christian population and
many of the Vlachs supported the uprising.
The other peoples in Macedonia, among
them Jews, Greeks, Slavic-speaking Muslims, and Turks, were less enthusiastic.
Ottoman authorities responded quickly
against the lightly armed rebels with their
regular army as well as with irregular forces.
The Bulgarian government failed to respond

144

Iron Guard
See also: Balkan Wars, 19121913, Causes;
Macedonia; VMRO

Further Reading
Crampton, R. J. Bulgaria 18781918: A History. Boulder, CO: East European Mongraphs, 1983.
Perry, Duncan. The Politics of Terror: The
Macedonian Revolutionary Movements,
18931903. Durham, NC: Duke University
Press, 1988.
Rossos, Andrew. Macedonia and the Macedonians: A History. Stanford, CA: Hoover
Institution Press, 2008.

Iron Guard
The Iron Guard was an extreme right-wing
(Fascist) organization that existed in Romania from 1927 to 1941. Also known as the
Legion of the Archangel Michael (LAM), it
professed anti-Communist and anti-Semitic
views and became infamous for its role in
the Romanian Holocaust.
Corneliu Zelea Codreanu (18991938),
the founder of the Iron Guard, initially
helped establish the League of National
Christian Defense in 1922, but he later
broke up with it and formed the LAM in
1927. In its early days, Codreanu declared
that the LAM had no program and only
embraced a fierce belief in God while promoting nationalism and anticorruption. In
spring 1930, Codreanu and his followers
formed a new militant organization called
Garda de Fier (The Iron Guard) to combat
Communist and antinationalist forces; yet
since only the LAM joined it, this in effect
was but a change of name. At the same
time, LAM agitators went to the countryside
in hopes of mobilizing peasant masses in
support of their organization and oftentimes
against the Jews. Pogroms followed in
multiple towns and villages across Romania,

and the Iron Guard was subsequently


declared illegal in 1933 by Prime Minister
Ion Duca (18791933). This did not
discourage the Iron Guard activists, who
assassinated Duca in retaliation, and the
movement flourished.
Between 1934 and 1937, the Iron Guard
assumed a mass following and won up to
25 percent of all votes in multiple elections,
though under an assumed name of the All
for the Fatherland Party. Realizing that the
movement could no longer be successfully
banned or controlled, King Carol II (1893
1953) invited Codreanu in February 1937
to form a government, an offer he refused.
In response, King Carol declared all parties
illegal and assumed dictatorial powers,
arresting Codreanu and several other legionaries in the process. Codreanu and his 13
followers were assassinated in 1938, presumably during an escape attempt, and the
Iron Guard once again retaliated by killing
Prime Minister Armand Calinescu (1893
1939). After a temporary exile and multiple
persecutions, Horia Sima (19071993), the
new leader of the Iron Guard, and other
legionaries were allowed to return to
Romania in April 1940.
Though the violence against Jews was not
novel to the movement, the Iron Guards
committed their most gruesome acts
between their return in 1940 and the final
crackdown on the movement in 1941.
During these months, at least 600 Jews
were slaughtered, though the number was
probably higher. Many were tortured,
humiliated, and brutally beaten before they
were murdered. Ion Antonescu (1882
1946), who received full dictatorial powers
on September 6, 1940, initially attempted
to form a government with the Iron Guard
leaders, but the relationship turned sour
quickly. The situation worsened when the
Iron Guards broke into the prison and

145

146

Italy in the Balkans during World War I

brutally murdered 64 former politicians and


officers who were incarcerated for their suspected involvement in Codreanus murder.
In this tense environment, Antonescu prepared to crush the Iron Guards with Hitlers
approval, while Sima was preparing a coup
to oust Antonescu.
On January 21, 1941, the legionaries riot
broke out in Bucharest, and a massacre followed. Also known as the Bucharest pogrom, this violence directly touched at least
1,360 Jews, of which 1,107 were tortured
or murdered, and six synagogues were
desecrated. It was also the most gruesome
of all prior cases; dead bodies were hanged
on meat hooks with their intestines out and
had Kosher meat signs on them. The riot
was put down three days later, over 9,000
Iron Guards were arrested, and the movement was crushed. Sima, however, along
with many others, went into exile in Spain,
from where he continued his political
engagements until his death in 1993.
Irina Mukhina
See also: Carol II, King of Romania (1893
1953); Romania in World War II

Further Reading
Ioanid, Radu. The Holocaust in Romania: The
Destruction of Jews and Gypsies under the
Antonescu Regime, 19401944. Published
in Association with the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Chicago: Ivan R.
Dee, 2000.
Klepper, Nicolae. Romania: An Illustrated
History. New York: Hippocrene Books,
2002.
Livezeanu, Irina. Cultural Politics in Greater
Romania: Regionalism, Nation Building,
and Ethnic Struggle, 19181930. Ithaca,
NY: Cornell University Press, 1995.
Morgan, Philip. Fascism in Europe, 1919
1945. London: Routledge, 2003.

Italy in the Balkans during


World War I
After achieving national unity in 1861, the
Italian government continued to harbor
aspirations to territories beyond the Italian
Peninsula. Many of these were in the Balkan
Peninsula. They included Dalmatia, at that
time ruled by the Habsburg Empire, and
Albania, then under the authority of the
Ottoman Empire. During the Balkan Wars
of 19121913, Italy and its nominal ally
Austria-Hungary cooperated at the London
Ambassadors Conference to insure Great
Power support for an independent Albania.
The Treaty of London of May 30, 1913,
confirmed Albanian independence. This
thwarted the attempts of Balkan allies
Greece, Montenegro, and Serbia to take
over this territory. After the outbreak of
World War I, the fragile new Albanian state
collapsed. In early December 1914, before
they entered the war themselves, the Italians
sent troops to occupy the city of Vlore
(Valona) and the Adriatic island of Sazan
(Saseno) off of Vlore . This action was
intended to maintain Italys interests in
Albania as Greek, Montenegrin, and Serbian
troops occupied parts of the country, and to
insure that Austro-Hungarian influence did
not increase there.
After the outbreak of the war in the
summer of 1914, the Italians negotiated
with both belligerent alliances. On
April 26, 1915, they agreed to enter the war
on the side of the Entente. In return, Italy
was to receive the Balkan areas of Vlore
and Sazan as well as a protectorate in central
Albania. Italy was also to obtain most of
Dalmatia. This brought Italy into direct
competition with Serbia, which also sought
to gain Habsburg Adriatic territories. Balkan
interests remained subordinate to Italys

Italy in the Balkans during World War I

desire to acquire Austrian Alpine territories.


Nevertheless, in order realize their Albanian
ambitions, the Italians expanded their presence to Vlores hinterland. 80,000 Italian
troops landed at Vlore in the autumn of
1915. At the end of 1915, they established
a line of control in the north along the
Shkumbin River. After they defeated and
overran Montenegro and Serbia, AustroHungarian forces occupied Albania north
of that river. In June 1917, the Italians proclaimed a protectorate over Albania. At the
same time, they extended their control over
southern Albania to expel Greek irregular
and proKing Constantine forces from
northern Epirus. Italian forces in Albania
also made contact other Entente forces
along the Macedonian front, which then
stretched from the Adriatic Sea at the
mouth of the Shkumbin River to the Aegean
Sea near the mouth of the Struma River.
In response to the pleas of their Entente
allies, the Italians dispatched the 35th
Infantry Division to Salonika to buttress the
Entente effort there. They would have preferred to add this division to the Italian
forces in Albania, which engaged in regular
conflict with the Austro-Hungarians. This
division assumed positions in the bend of
the Cherna River in the central part of the
Macedonian Front. For most of the war, it
made little headway against the Bulgarians.
It did participate in the great Entente offensive of September 1918, which broke
through the Bulgarian positions further east
at Dobro Pole and resulted in the withdrawal
of Bulgaria from the war.
The armistice of November 11, 1918, did
not end the Italian effort in the Balkans.
They continued to maintain considerable
forces in Albania. The Rome government
intended to establish a protectorate over as
much of Albania as possible and to prevent

Greek and Serbian (Yugoslav) claims at a


minimum. On July 20, 1919, Italy and Greece
concluded the so-called Tittoni-Venizalos
agreement, by which Greece recognized the
Italian protectorate over Albania. In return,
the Italians accepted Greek control of
northern Epirus. The establishment of a viable
Albanian central government as a result of the
Congress of Lushnje in 1920 and Italian
domestic instability led the Italians to sign
an agreement on September 3, 1920, with
the new Albanian government to withdraw
from Albania. The island of Sazan remained
under Italian control. The Italians would
return within 20 years.
Nor did the end of the fighting in 1918
indicate the conclusion of Italian efforts in
Dalmatia. The Paris Peace settlement
refused to honor the commitment made in
the 1915 Treaty of London to give Dalmatia
to Italy. Instead Dalmatia became a part of
the new Kingdom of the Serbs, Croats, and
Slovenes (Yugoslavia). The border between
the two states remained contentious until
the signing of the Treaty of Rapallo of
November 12, 1920, which assigned to
Italy Istria, the Adriatic islands of Cres, Lastovo, and Losinj, and the Dalmatian city of
Zadar (Zara). Italian Adriatic holding grew
further in 1924 when Italy annexed the free
city of Fiume (Rijeka). Benito Mussolini
(18831945) did not abandon Italys Balkan
interests. After taking power in Rome in
1922, he gradually restored the Italian
protectorate over Albania and adopted a
hostile position toward Greece and Yugoslavia. Italy returned in force to the region
beginning in the spring of 1939.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Albania in the Balkan Wars; Albania
in World War I; Fiume/Rijeka, 19191924;
London, Treaty of, 1913

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Italy in the Balkans during World War II

Further Reading
Burgwyn, H. James. The Legend of Mutilated
Victory: Italy, the Great War and the Paris
Peace Conference. London: Greenwood,
1993.
Sifka-Theodosiou, Aneliki. The Italian Presence on the Balkan Front (19151918),
Balkan Studies 36, no. 1 (1995): 6982.
Villari, Luigi. The Macedonian Campaign.
London: T. Fisher Unwin, 1922.

Italy in the Balkans during


World War II
The Italians had long harbored ambitions in
the Balkans. Even before World War I, they
had aspired to areas of the AustroHungarian Adriatic coast and to Ottoman
Albania. The Treaty of London of 1915
promised most of these areas to Italy in
return for participation in the war on the
side of the Entente powers. Only Woodrow
Wilsons (18561924) adamant refusal at
the Paris Peace conference in 1919 to transfer large populations of Albanians and
South Slavs to Italian control prevented the
terms of the treaty from begin realized. All
Italy obtained was the port of Zara (Zadar)
and a few Adriatic Islands. In 1923, they
also annexed the port of Fiume (Rejeka)
after it had endured a brief period of
independence.
None of these gains were enough to
satisfy the aspirations of Benito Mussolini
(18831945). He spoke of reestablishing the
Roman Empire and called the Mediterranean
Sea our lake. In pursuit of this aim,
Mussolini adopted disruptive polices in
the Balkans, especially toward the new Yugoslav state. After King Alexander (18881834)
established his personal regime in Yugoslavia,
Mussolini harbored anti-Yugoslav Croatian
fascists (Ustasa). Italian agents were also
involved in the assassination of King

Alexander in Marseille in 1934. During the


1930s, the Italians established a virtual
protectorate in Albania through the government of King Zog (18951961).
In April 1939, seeking to emulate his
German allys annexation of Czechoslovakia the previous month, Mussolini ordered
Italian forces to invade and occupy Albania.
When they landed on April 7, 1939, they
met some Albanian resistance, which they
quickly overcame. Italian king Victor
Emmanuel III (18691947) assumed Zogs
title of king of the Albanians.
The conquest of Albania was insufficient
to sate Mussolinis appetite for Balkan
territory. He utilized the presence of Albanian minorities in Greece and Yugoslavia to
raise territorial claims. The overwhelming
German successes in western Europe in
May and June 1940 and Italys futile intervention in the war against France led Mussolini to seek military glory and living space
in the Balkans. Since Germany had strong
economic ties to Yugoslavia, Mussolini
decided to act against Greece. In a rapid
campaign he sought to overrun the Greek
mainland and seize control of most of the
Ionian and Aegean Islands.
The Italians intended to provoke the
Greeks by undertaking a number of attacks,
including the sinking of the Greek light
cruiser Helle on August 15, 1940. Finally,
on October 28, after the Greek government
rejected an Italian ultimatum to allow Italian
troops to occupy a number of strategic
points throughout the country, the Italians
invaded northwestern Greece from bases in
Albania. The Italian forces quickly bogged
down because of the rugged terrain and the
fierce resistance they encountered. A Greek
counteroffensive threw the Italians out
of Greece and out of about a quarter of
Albania. The Italian-Greek War stalemated
through much of the winter of 19401941.

Italy in the Balkans during World War II

Italian prime minister Benito Mussolini on the Greek front, observing Italian troops on the
Narta Mount, March 1941. (Roger Viollet/Getty Images)

The arrival of British airmen and soldiers


drew the attention of German dictator
Adolf Hitler (18891945). He decided to
intervene on behalf of his beleaguered ally.
The Germans prepared Operation Marita
for an attack on Greece. A coup by a proBritish cabal of Yugoslav Air Force officers
in Belgrade on April 26 forced the inclusion
of Yugoslavia in the plans for the operation.
German, Hungarian, and Italian troops
invaded Yugoslavia on April 6. The Yugoslavs surrendered on April 17. German and
Italian troops continued on into Greece.
Greek forces surrendered on April 20.
The defeat of Greece and Yugoslavia
made the realization of an Italian empire in
the Balkans possible. The Italians occupied
much of Greece. They annexed much of Slovenia and most of the Adriatic Coast.
Montenegro was restored as a kingdom
with Victor Emanuel assuming his fatherin-law King Nikolas (18411921) old title.
They attached parts of Kosovo and

Macedonia to Albania. Italy also assumed a


zone of influence in the new Ustasa-ruled
state of Croatia.
Expansion into the Balkans soon proved
to be far beyond the resources of Mussolinis Italy. In the summer of 1941, resistance
to Italian rule emerged throughout the
region. This was especially the case in
Montenegro and in Bosnia, then under Croatian rule. Italian troops initially responded
with brutality. While that temporarily succeed in suppressing the outbreaks, the Italians realized that they lacked the means
and the will to continue that way. By the
fall of 1941, local Italian commanders
sought arrangements with Serbian resistance
etniks). They supplied weapons
forces (C
and exchanged intelligence. By the winter
of 1942, they began to cooperate in military
operations against the Communist Partisans.
Although the Italian occupation forces in
Greece and Yugoslavia frequently behaved
with great brutality and occasionally

149

150

Izetbegovic, Alija

perpetrated horrific atrocities, in comparison


to the Germans, they appeared relatively
benign. Jews and others seeking to escape
harsh conditions in German-ruled areas of
Greece and Yugoslavia frequently sought
refuge in the Italian areas.
Nevertheless, by 1943, the Italians were
becoming exhausted from their efforts in
the Balkans and their failures in North
Africa and Soviet Russia. Whole areas
nominally under Italian occupation were
devoid of Italian military presence. Strong
resistance movements developed even in
previously quiescent Albania. The coup in
Rome ousting Mussolini on July 25, 1943,
and the subsequent Italian surrender on
September 8 meant doom for the Italian
empire in the Balkans and for many of the
Italian servicemen stationed there. The Germans moved quickly to occupy strategic
locations in the Italian-occupied territories
and to disarm the Italian armed forces. The
Germans met shows of Italian reluctance or
resistance with great brutality. Most Italian
troops were interned or killed. A few managed to escape and join local Albanian,
Greek, and Yugoslav resistance groups.
Mussolinis dreams of an Italian empire in
the Balkans ended tragically for Italians
and for Balkan peoples.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Cetniks; Fiume/Rijeka, 19191924;
Greco-Italian War, 19401941; Nikola, King
of Montenegro (18411921); Partisans, Albania; Partisans, Yugoslavia; Ustasa; Zog, King
of the Albanians (18951961)

Further Reading
Burgwyn, H. James. Mussolini Warlord:
Failed Dreams of Empire, 19401943.
New York: Enigma Books, 2012.
Pavlowitch, Stavan K. Hitlers New Disorder:
The Second World War in Yugoslavia. New
York: Columbia University Press, 2008.

Thomas, N., and K. Mikulan. Axis Forces in


Yugoslavia, 19411945. Oxford: Osprey,
1995.
Tomasevich, Jozo. War and Revolution in
Yugoslavia, 19411945: Occupation and
Collaboration. Stanford, CA: Stanford
University Press, 2001.

Izetbegovic, Alija (19252003)


In September 1996, Alija Izetbegovic was
elected to the new tripartite presidency of
Bosnia and was selected as the presidencys
chairperson. Izetbegovic was born on
August 8, 1925, in Bosanski Samac, a town
in northeastern Bosnia. His homeland had
long been subjected to instability resulting
from intense ethnic and religious differences
on the Balkan Peninsula. In Izetbegovics
youth, Bosnia was a part of the Kingdom of
Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes, which had
emerged after the Habsburg dynasty collapsed in World War I.
During World War II, the Nazis annexed
Bosnia and terrorized the country. After the
war, Communists led by Josip Broz Tito
(18921980) came to power, and Bosnia
and Herzegovina became a member republic
of Titos Yugoslavia. Izetbegovic, who, like
Tito, had fought against the Nazi Party,
now opposed the Communists and joined
the Young Muslims to protect Islam. His dissent resulted in the government arresting
him, and in March 1946, he was sentenced
to five years at hard labor.
In 1951, Izetbegovic began studying law
in Sarajevo. After receiving his degree, he
became a legal adviser to a construction
company. Around 1980, he retired from this
position and began writing about Islam. In
1984, his book Islam between East and
West promoted the religion as a bridge
between modern Western Europe and traditional Eastern European culture. By this

Izetbegovic, Alija

time, Tito had died, but Izetbegovics writings still raised government retribution.
In 1983, he and several other prominent
Muslims were sentenced to prison for
disloyalty.
When Izetbegovic was released in 1989,
conditions in Yugoslavia were changing dramatically. The age-old ethnic and religious
tensions grew, expressed through nationalist
and anti-Communist fervor that eventually
led to independence movements in many of
Yugoslavias provinces, particularly Croatia
and Bosnia. In 1990, Izetbegovic and other
Muslim activists organized the Stranka
Demokratske Akcije (SDA), or Party of
Democratic Action. They demanded the
establishment of a market economy, multiparty democracy, and a united Bosnia. In
November, Bosnia held an open election,
and Izetbegovic ran as the SDAs candidate
for the governing seven-member council.
He received 37 percent of the vote and thus
won a seat. In December, he was chosen
president of the council, making him
president of Bosnia. The question remained
as to what Bosnias relationship would be
with the other Yugoslav states.
In 1991, a civil war erupted in neighboring Croatia. The following year, amid this
turmoil, Bosnian Serbs declared their
independence from Bosnia, claiming more
than half of that states territory. While Croatia, meanwhile, issued a declaration of
independence from Yugoslavia and thus hastened the fall of that nation, Bosnia decided
to hold its own referendum on nationhood.
Bosnians voted overwhelmingly to break
from Yugoslavia. Serb extremists in the Serbian areas then joined with the Yugoslav
army, surrounded Sarajevo with roadblocks,
and bombarded it.
Izetbegovic had hoped to avoid bloodshed. All during 1991, he had contained radicals within his own Muslim community and

tried to reach a negotiated settlement with


Yugoslavia. After Croatia seceded, however,
it was clear that continued membership in
Yugoslavia would mean domination by
Serbs, who were now the most powerful
group in the Yugoslav nation.
In April 1992, the United States and the
European Community recognized Bosnias
independence. The Serbs, however, continued to attack Bosnian cities as they began
ethnic cleansing, forcing Muslims and
Croats out of areas by relocating or killing
them. Izetbegovic entered negotiations with
the Serbs, but at one point, while on his
way back to Bosnia from Portugal (the site
of the talks), they captured and threatened
to kill him. An international protest led to
his release after one night in captivity.
Throughout 1992, the situation in Bosnia
worsened. Izetbegovic tried to get the West
to intervene with military assistance, if necessary, to stop the ethnic cleansing, but he
obtained only a limited and uncoordinated
response. In 1993, the United States and
Britain proposed a plan that would divide
Bosnia into provinces, each of them autonomous and distributed among Muslims,
Serbs, and Croats. Izetbegovic did not like
the plan because it would allow the Serbs
to keep land they had captured from
the Bosnians and thus reward aggression.
Bosnias position, however, was weak, so
he reluctantly agreed to the proposal. The
Bosnian Serbs, though, rejected it and
demanded a completely independent state
carved from Bosnia.
By 1994, Izetbegovic was presiding over
a desperate situation. Although the Bosnian
Serbs had a falling out with the Yugoslav
Serbs who had supported them, they continued to battle Bosnia with great success.
In addition, although Western European
nations and the United States condemned
Serb aggression, they did little to stop it

151

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Izetbegovic, Alija

and restricted their military action to occasional air strikes against the Bosnian Serb
army. Izetbegovic was able to exert his
authority only over a small portion of Bosnian territory, as the Serbs controlled most
of it. Late in 1994, a precarious truce took
hold in Bosnia, one that ultimately led to a
more permanent peace, when in November 1995 Izetbegovic and Croat and Serb
leaders signed a peace accord known as the
Dayton Agreement (1995), ending the fighting in Bosnia.
The agreement called the establishment
of a tripartite presidency, with representatives from each of the three groups. In the
ensuing election, held in September 1996,
Izetbegovic was elected as the Bosnian
representative to the presidency. As the
recipient of the largest number of votes,
Izetbegovic was also appointed to serve
a two-year term as chairperson of the
presidency.

Citing health reasons, Izetbegovic


announced in June 2000 that he would step
down in October, two years before his term
expired. He was replaced by Martin Raguz
(1958). Izetbegovic died on October 19,
2003, of complications from injuries received
from a fall at his home.
Neil A. Hamilton
See also: Bosnian War, 19921995; Dayton
Peace Accords, 1995; Yugoslav Wars, 1991
1995; Yugoslav Wars, 19911995, Causes;
Yugoslav Wars, 19911995, Consequences

Further Reading
Kaplan, Robert D. Balkan Ghosts: A Journey
through History. New York: St. Martins
Press, 1993.
Magas, Branka. The Destruction of Yugoslavia: Tracking the Breakup 19801992.
New York: Verso, 1993.
Silber, Laura, and Allan Little. Yugoslavia: Death
of a Nation. New York: TV Books, 1996.

J
Janina, Siege of, 19121913

their lines completely around the city and


the lake of the same name north of the city,
leaving the north open. For that reason the
garrison continued to receive reinforcements
and supplies from the Albanian hinterland.
The Greeks did not sign the armistice,
mainly in order to continue their siege operations at Janina. The first Greek assault on
the fortress on December 14 took some forward Ottoman positions, but not Fort Bijan.
After seizing Koritsa northeast of Janina on
December 20, 1912, the Greeks were able
to expand their lines around the northeastern
corner of Janina and restrict the flow of reinforcements and supplies into the city. The
Ottomans maintained an active defense,
launching counterattacks against the Greek
positions. Another full frontal Greek
assault on the city failed on January 22.
Crown Prince Constantine (18681923) then
assumed command of the besieging forces.
Another attack began on March 5. It pushed
past Fort Bijan and soon overwhelmed the
exhausted defenders. Esat Pasha surrendered
the morning of the next day. The Greeks
took around 8,600 Ottoman prisoners and
108 guns at a cost of 500 dead and wounded.
Another 2,800 Ottomans died in the final battle. Much of the Ottoman garrison was able to
escape to the northeast. The conclusion of the
siege enabled the Greeks to shift much of
their army eastward for the looming confrontation with Bulgaria over Macedonia.
Richard C. Hall

The siege of Janina (Albanian: Janine; Greek:


Ioannina; Turkish: Yanya) was a protracted
engagement during the First Balkan War,
19121913. Janina was the seat of the Ottoman vilayet of the same name. Although the
mixed population of the city was predominately Greek, the countryside was mainly
Albanian. Janina was the southern counterpart
of Scutari (Shkoder), a fortified city on a lake.
Together, Janina and Scutari marked the
northern and southern expectations of
Albanian nationalists. The Ottomans had fortified the city under the direction of General
Colmar von der Goltz (18431916). Fortified
positions protected the west, south, and east
of the city. The most important of these was
Fort Bizani (Bijan), southeast of the city. At
the beginning of the First Balkan War, there
were two Ottoman divisions and about
90 big guns in the city, under the command
of Brigadier General Esat Pasha (1862
1952). It was the main objective of the Greek
campaign in Epirus.
The Greek Army of Epirus, under the
command of General Constantine Sapundzakes (18461931), reached the city at the
beginning of November. An Italian volunteer legion under the command of General
Ricciotti Garibaldi (18471924), the son of
Italian national hero Giuseppe Garibaldi
(18071882), soon joined the Greeks. By
that time, Albanian irregulars and Ottoman
troops retreating from Macedonia had supplemented the garrison. The besieging
forces lacked sufficient numbers to extend

See also: Albania in the Balkan Wars; Balkan


War, First, 19121913; Greece in the Balkan
Wars

153

154

JNA (Yugoslav Peoples Army)

Further Reading
Erickson, Edward J. Defeat in Detail: The
Ottoman Army in the Balkans, 19121913,
Westport, CT: Praeger, 2003.
Hall, Richard C. The Balkan Wars, 1912
1913: Prelude to the First World War. London: Routledge, 2000.
Hellenic Army General Staff. A Concise History of the Balkan Wars, 19121913,
Athens: Army History Directorate, 1998.

JNA (Yugoslav Peoples Army)


The JNA, Jugoslovenska Narodna Armija, is
the common abbreviation for the Yugoslav
Peoples Army, which existed between 1945
and 1992 as the military arm of the Socialist
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. The JNA
grew out of the Yugoslav partisan army of
World War II and lasted until the Socialist
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia collapsed
into civil war in the 1990s. In 1992, the JNA
transitioned into being the military of the
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (composed
of Serbia and Montenegro, which were not
universally recognized under the name
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia).
Germany, Italy, and Hungary invaded
Yugoslavia on April 6, 1941, after Serbian
military officers led a coup against the
Yugoslav government, which had bowed
under German pressure to join the Tripartite
Pact, the Axis powers of World War II. An
armistice was reached 11 days later, with
the Serbian-dominated Royal Yugoslav
Army surrendering, but guerilla warfare resistance movements were formed and lasted
until the end of the war. The largest
resistance movements were the Cetniks, a
Serbian nationalist movement, and a Communist Party movement, both of which
eventually came into conflict with each
other, as well as the forces of the puppet
governments set up by Germany.

The roots of the JNA derive from the


National Liberation Army (NLA), the Partisans, which used some nationalist rhetoric
against the occupation but was politically
organized as the military expression of a
Communist political movement. The Partisan resistance movement benefited from
commanders with experience in the Royal
Yugoslav Army and generals who had
fought in the Spanish Civil War. In addition
to locally organized resistance units typical
of guerilla warfare against a stronger occupying force, the Proletarian Brigades were
formed with soldiers drawn from across
Yugoslavia and were designed to be used
throughout the country. The Proletarian
Brigades were intentionally and openly
designed to be a political component of the
Communist movement in Yugoslavia.
Despite large numbers of occupying Axis
forces and numerous German offensives
against concentrations of Partisan forces,
the NLA was able to seize territory throughout the war and eventually use conventional
warfare tactics to drive the Axis forces
from Yugoslavia with heavy Soviet and
Western ally support.
Josip Broz Tito (18921980) had become
the leading figure of the Partisan resistance
forces during World War II. The massresistance, guerilla-warfare nature of the
Partisans led to an inherent blurring
of military-civilian distinctions in the
NLA that existed alongside the administrative structures created by the resistance
government of the Communist movement,
the Anti-Fascist Council of the Peoples
Liberation of Yugoslavia (AVNOJ). The
popular support for the NLA during the
war, which had not relied simply on antioccupation nationalism, provided an important source of political legitimacy for the
Communist-led government after the war.
Alternative political movements were

JNA (Yugoslav Peoples Army)

ruthlessly suppressed. On March 1, 1945,


the NLA was formally renamed the Yugoslav Army, which would later be renamed
the Yugoslav Peoples Army on December 22, 1951.
The JNA operational doctrine was rooted
in the independent foreign policy of Yugoslavia, the experience of the NLA during
World War II, and the increased threat of
invasion from the Soviet Union after the
invasion of Czechoslovakia in 1968. The
greatest military threats, as during World
War II, were assumed to come from much
more powerful countries since Yugoslavia
was sandwiched both geographically and
politically between NATO and the Warsaw
Pact during the Cold War. After World War
II, Yugoslavia positioned itself as a nonaligned Communist state, having split with
the Soviet Union over economic, territorial,
and political issues. Yugoslavia continued
to receive economic and military aid that
had begun during World War II and continued into the early 1950s from the United
States and other Western powers. Until the
thawing of relations with the Soviet Union
during the late 1950s, Yugoslavia invested
heavily in a traditional conventional military
through enormous domestic expenditure and
military aid from the United States (approximately 500,000 active military with large
mobilization capacity). By the 1960s, the
size of the JNA had been cut by more
than half as the perceived external threat
declined.
A new vision of the JNA was developed
under the doctrine of Total National Defense
in 1969 after the 1968 invasion of Czechoslovakia by the Warsaw Pact. Unable to
resume massive military spending, the
Yugoslav government saw the invasion as a
warning that the Soviet Union might begin
to see the invasion of Yugoslavia as something that could be achieved quickly and

easily without international consequence,


bringing Yugoslavia under the Soviet Unions
control. Costs aside, conventional resistance
by a country the size of Yugoslavia to the
asymmetric threat of the Soviet Union in the
1960s seemed futile at best. Instead, under
the new doctrine, the JNA during the 1970s
and 1980s was designed to fight an asymmetric war by using delaying actions at the borders of the country long enough that the
mass of the public could form into resistance
units throughout the country, but particularly
in the urban centers and mountainous regions
throughout Yugoslavia.
The goal of the doctrine was to deter invasion by having a military strategy designed
around rapid mass-mobilization of the population and eventual widespread guerilla warfare resistance that would cause any
invasion to be long and costly. In practice,
the JNA would briefly delay a massive invasion long enough to be joined by a militia
(fighting independently as the Territorial
Defense Force [TDF], not subordinate to
the JNA) composed of a majority of the population. Weapon stores, even if not fully
modern, would be established throughout
the entire country and would be immediately available to the TDFe.g., each large
factory would have its own weapon store.
The JNA would then fight in concert with
the militia, attacking and defending invading forces from all sides. As a last resort,
the JNA would divide itself into smaller
units and would switch to guerilla warfare
alongside the mobilized population. As a
small country with a potentially overwhelming threat, Yugoslavia was also unable
politically to join the NATO alliance
to deter aggression. The technological
advantage of the Soviet military was also
something Yugoslavia could not hope
to compete with through conventional warfare. The role of the JNA was therefore

155

156

JNA (Yugoslav Peoples Army)

transformed into an important piece of a


broader deterrence strategy focused on
increasing the perceived costs of invasion.
By delaying any overwhelming invasion
long enough to arm and organize the
minimally trained population, uncertainty
would be introduced for the invader and
the possibility created of a massive occupation force needed to deal with a lengthy
guerilla war.
The political fragmentation of Yugoslavia
began in January 1990 after the revolutions
across Eastern Europe in 1989, but political
tensions between constituent republics had
been increasing dramatically for the decade
after Titos death on May 4, 1980. The JNA,
ideologically supportive of communism as
an institution, had played a role in keeping
the country unified throughout Titos leadership and played a political role in attempting
to squash the increasing political conflicts
between the republics of Yugoslavia after his
death. A struggle for power and autonomy
between constituent republics and the federal
government, politically supported by escalating use of nationalism during the 1980s, led
to Slovenian and Croatian declarations of
independence and a multisided war for
territory beginning in June 1991. Multiparty
elections held in Slovenia and Croatia in
1990 were seen as a threat to the JNA, which
had a Serb-dominated officer corps.
The Territorial Defense Forces and their
weapon stores would have helped Slovenia
and Croatia develop separate militaries

from the JNA loyal to the increasingly independent republics. The JNA successfully
seized the weapon stores of the Croatian
TDF, but the JNAs attempts to neutralize
the TDF of Slovenia in 1990 was only partially successful and had actually intensified
the political crisis. Croatian and Slovenian
officers in the JNA began working to build independent military organizations with arms
smuggled into the country. By the summer
of 1991, the JNA had failed in an attempt to
maintain a unified Yugoslavia by preventing
Slovenian independence and transformed
into simply the army of Serbia fighting a war
for territory in Croatia and Bosnia. On
May 20, 1992, the JNA was officially transformed into the military of the new Federal
Republic of Yugoslavia, consisting of the
former republics of Serbia and Montenegro.
Brian G. Smith
See also: Partisans, Yugoslavia; Tito, Josip
Broz (18921980); Yugoslav Wars, 1991
1995, Causes; Yugoslav Wars, 19911995,
Consequences

Further Reading
Jelavich, Barbara. History of the Balkans. Vol.
2, Twentieth Century. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1983.
Rogel, Carole. The Breakup of Yugoslavia and
the War in Bosnia. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1998.
Silber, Laura, and Allan Little. Yugoslavia:
Death of a Nation. New York: Penguin
USA, 1996.

K
Kalimantsi, Battle of, 1913

attack and contain the Greek army, then


advancing up the Struma River valley. It was
too late, however, to save Bulgaria. With
Ottoman and Romanian forces moving unopposed into southeastern and northeastern
Bulgaria, respectively, the Bulgarians had to
accept an armistice on July 31, 1913.
Richard C. Hall

The battle of Kalimantsi was an important


engagement between the Bulgarian Fourth
Army and the Serbian Third Army during
the Second Balkan War in 1913. In the initial round of fighting in the Second Balkan
War, the Bulgarian Fourth Army had suffered heavy losses in a defeat by the Serbian
First and Third Armies around the Bregalinitsa River in southeastern Macedonia. On
July 13, the Fourth and Fifth Armies came
under the unified command of General Mihail
Savov (18571928), the former deputy commander in chief of the Bulgarian army. He
established strong defensive positions on the
Bulgarian side of the old Bulgarian-Ottoman
frontier in southeastern Macedonia on the
Kalimantsi plateau. The Serbian Third Army
under the command of General Boz idar
Jankovic (18491920) began its attacks on
July 18 in pouring rain against the Bulgarian
Fourth Army. An allied Montenegrin division
participated in the attacks. The Bulgarians
held their positions, pushing the Serbs back
with bayonet charges. By July 19, the main
fighting had ended, although some fighting
continued in the area for the remainder of
the war. Nevertheless, the Serbs were unable
to proceed further.
This was an important defensive victory
for the Bulgarians. The Serbs and Montenegrins lost around 2,700 dead and over 5,000
wounded. Bulgarian casualties were probably similar. The victory prevented a Serbian invasion of Bulgaria. It also allowed
the Bulgarians to shift some forces south to

See also: Balkan War, Second, 1913; Bulgaria


in the Balkan Wars; Savov, Mihail (18571928)

Further Reading
Hall, Richard C. The Balkan Wars, 1912
1913: Prelude to the First World War.
London: Routledge, 2000.
Skoko, Savo. Drugi Balkanski rat 1913,
Knjiga druga. Tok i zavrshetak rata.
Belgrade: Vojonoistorijski institute, 1968.

Karadzic, Radovan (1945)


Radovan Karadzic served as the president of
the former self-declared but unrecognized
Serbian Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina until July 1996. Karadzic was born on
June 19, 1945, in Petnjica, Yugoslavia. He
trained as a psychiatrist and worked in state
hospitals and then with Unis Co. In 1990,
he cofounded the Serbian Democratic
Party. He was the leader of the selfdeclared Serbian republic that was created
within Bosnia after Bosnian president Alija
Izetbegovic declared the republics independence from Yugoslavia in early 1992.
Karadzic denied that he and his associates
officially endorsed the Serbian ethnic

157

158

Karageorge (George Petrovic)

cleansing campaigns that were conducted in


efforts to create huge Serbian-held regions
within Bosnia, repeatedly claiming that
Serbian forces were merely trying to protect
Serbian enclaves from attacks by the
nations Muslims. Karadzic agreed to resign
from office in July 1996 following his
indictment on war crimes charges. He
appointed as his successor Biljana Plavsic
(1930), who in September 1996 was
elected president of the Bosnian Serb region
Republika Srpska.
In August 1997, Karadzic rejected a U.S.
offer that would have allowed him to avoid
extradition and prosecution for war crimes
by relocating to another, undisclosed country. He continued to maintain a large and
active following of hard-liners in Serbia
and to dominate affairs in Serbia, many feel
in violation of the Dayton Agreement.
In late December 2001, the Serbian
Democratic Party of Bosnia and Herzegovina, still a dominant force in Bosnian Serb
politics, expelled Karadzic, along with his
closest aide and former Bosnian parliamentary speaker Momcilo Krajisnik (1945).
On July 21, 2008, Serbian authorities
arrested the disguised Karadzic in Belgrade.
They turned him over to the International
Criminal Tribunal at The Hague, Netherlands. As of 2011, he remained there as the
legal case against him proceeded.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Bosnian War, 19921995; Dayton
Peace Accords, 1995; Srebrinica Massacre,
1995; Yugoslav Wars, 19911995; Yugoslav
Wars, 19911995, Causes; Yugoslav Wars,
19911995, Consequences

Further Reading
Cigar, Norman L. Genocide in Bosnia: The Policy of Ethnic Cleansing. College Station:
Texas A&M University Press, 1995.

Fogelquist, Alan F. Handbook of Facts on: The


Break-Up of Yugoslavia International
Policy and the War in Bosnia-Herzegovina.
Whitmore Lake, MI: AEIOU Publishing,
1993.
Magas, Branka. The Destruction of Yugoslavia: Tracking the Breakup 19801992.
New York: Verso, 1993.
Silber, Laura, and Allan Little. Yugoslavia:
Death of a Nation. New York: TV Books,
1996.

Karageorge (George Petrovic;


17681818)
Karageorge, also known as Black George
because of his long black hair, was a legendary leader and founder of the core of the
modern Serbian state. Under his direction,
rebel forces and local village chiefs
achieved local autonomy then independence
from the Ottoman Empire. Although the
period of independence for Serbia under
Karageorge was brief, he cleared a path for
later Serbian nationalists to seize and secure
the countrys autonomy.
Born George Petrovic on November 14,
1768, Karageorge was a peasant in Serbia
who spent much of his youth herding goats.
In 1787, he moved to Austria and joined
the Austrian army. He earned distinction as
a soldier on campaigns in Italy and against
the Turks. By the early 1790s, he had
returned to Serbia and settled down as a livestock trader and father of seven sons, one of
whom, Alexander, would someday rule
Serbia as a prince.
The province of Serbia had long been
chafing under the rule of the Ottoman
Turks. Imbued with strong nationalist sentiment, the Serbians longed for autonomy
and the restoration of an independent Serbian state, although it had been centuries

Karageorge (George Petrovic)

since such a state existed. As the Ottoman


Empire began to show signs of weakness in
the early nineteenth century, nationalist factions within Serbia launched campaigns
against the Turks to claim their independence.
In 1804, Karageorge, now a seasoned soldier, helped organize the rebel chiefs and
priests against the rebellious Turkish Janissaries, an elite military corps that ruled Serbia in an arbitrary and cruel manner. The
Serbian rebel force quickly defeated the Janissaries, earning for themselves the gratitude
of Ottoman sultan Selim III (17611808),
who viewed the Janissaries as an uncontrollable military force.
Karageorge demanded from Selim III
Serbian autonomy in return, a proposal that
Selim decidedly rejected. Encouraged by
his military successes, Karageorge began a
war of independence against the Turks in
1805. The following year, he led the Serbians to a series of victories against the
Turks, most notably at battles in Misar and
Belgrade. The Serbian cause was aided by
the outbreak of war between Russia and the
Ottoman Empire in December 1806, which
brought Russia into direct involvement in
Serbian affairs. With tacit promises of Russian support, the Serbians continued their
campaign against the Turks, convinced that
the Russians would ensure Serbian independence if they won the war, one of many conflicts that made up the Napoleonic Wars.
Russia did indeed defeat the Turks, but in
the resulting treaty, Serbias claims of
autonomy were largely overlooked. With
Serbias status left undetermined, Karageorge soon found himself and his country
in the midst of struggles and intrigues
between the Austrian Empire, Russia,
France, and the Ottoman Empire. In addition, although Karageorge had proven
himself a strong and resourceful leader,
his leadership was contested among the

Serbians. A constant undercurrent of


diplomatic negotiations among the great
European powers was the power struggle
between Karageorge and Serbias other
chiefs and military leaders, foremost
among them Milos Obrenovic (1780
1860), the future Prince Milos.
By the end of 1808, Karageorge was
growing tired of the endless international
negotiations. He called together a group
of officials and notables at his home
and, after three days of traditional celebrations, had himself proclaimed hereditary
Supreme Leader. Almost three weeks later,
the Russian State Council approved his
actions.Russia recognized Karageorge as
the strongest Serb leader and thus lent limited support for his rule. As a ruler, Karageorge quickly worked to consolidate his
power, establishing an appointed council
and ending local autonomy, as Karageorge
assumed the power of appointing local
chiefs rather than allowing them to be
elected as was traditional.
The outbreak of the next phase of the
Napoleonic Wars put an end to Russian protection or guidance for Serbia, as French
emperor Napoleon I launched a massive
campaign against Russia in 1812. Although
the Treaty of Bucharest, signed by Russia
and the Ottoman Empire that same year,
guaranteed Serbia independence, the Turks
took advantage of Russias distraction to
reconquer Serbia. By October 1813, the
Turks had invaded Belgrade, and Karageorge had fled across the border into the
Hungarian provinces of the Austrian
Empire. When he asked to reside in Russia,
the Austrians arrested him and his followers
and kept them jailed in several locations.
The Turks asked for his return, but the
Austrians refused. The Russians finally succeeded in getting his transfer to the principality of Moldavia.

159

160

Kemal, Mustafa

Another Serbian independence movement


was launched in 1815 by Karageorges old
foe Obrenovic. Karageorge and his followers
hoped to return to Serbia to join in the fight,
but Obrenovic would not permit it. Nevertheless, Karageorge was smuggled into Serbia
in June 1817 by the Society of Friends, a
secret Greek organization working toward
Greek independence. Their pleas for aid
from Obrenovic had been refused, and they
hoped that Karageorge would support and
lead a general insurrection against the Turks
in the Balkans. When Obrenovic discovered
Karageorges presence in Serbia, he ordered
him killed, fearing that his rival would
attempt to oust him from power. Karageorge
was axed to death on July 25, 1817. Obrenovic did not stop with his assassination,
however. In order to placate the Ottoman
sultan, Karageorges head was stuffed and
sent to Constantinople. His legendary exploits
remained firmly rooted in Serbian minds,
however, and his heirs rivaled for power with
Obrenovics heirs in the decades to come.
Michael D. Johnson
See also: Obrenovic , Milos (17801860);
Serbian War of Independence, 18041818

Further Reading
Clissold, Stephen, ed. A Short History of
Yugoslavia: From Early Times to 1966. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1966.
Dedijer, Vladimir, et al. History of Yugoslavia.
Translated by Kordija Kveder. New York:
McGraw-Hill, 1974.
Petrovich, Michael Boro. A History of Modern
Serbia, 18041918. 2 vols. New York:
Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1976.

Kemal, Mustafa (18811938)


Turkish army general and political leader,
and first president of the Turkish Republic,

Mustafa Kemal was born Mustafa Rizi in


Salonika, Greece, on March 12, 1881. He
began military schooling at age 12. Mustafa
proved so adept at mathematics that he
earned the nickname Kemal, meaning
The Perfect One. The young man liked
the name and made it part of his own, preferring to be known as Mustafa Kemal and later
Kemal Ataturk.
Commissioned a lieutenant in 1902,
Kemal served ably in a number of staff
posts and combat commands. During the
turbulent years before the outbreak of
World War I, he became active in the emerging reformist Young Turk movement. In
1909, he took part in the march on Constantinople to depose Sultan Abdulhamid II
(18421918) but soon after turned his attention away from politics to military matters.
During 19111912, he saw action as a
major during the Italo-Turkish War when
the Italians invaded Libya. A year later, as a
lieutenant colonel, he was chief of staff of a
division based at Gallipoli during the Balkan
Wars of 19121913.
Kemal was overshadowed during this
period by the rise of his flamboyant contemporary Enver Pasha (18811922), a dashing,
politically minded officer, leader of the
Young Turks, and a remarkably inept general. Kemal and Enver disagreed violently
about the encouragement of German influence in the Turkish government and armed
forces. Unlike his rival, Kemal believed
that Turkey should remain neutral in World
War I, doubted the chances of the Central
Powers, and resented Envers invitation to
Berlin to send a military mission not only
to advise but actually to command Turkish
forces.
After a period of exile as military attache
in Sofia, Bulgaria, Kemal was recalled and,
with the rank of colonel, appointed to command the 19th Division based at Rodosto

Kemal, Mustafa

on the Gallipoli Peninsula. Although in


charge only of the area reserves and subordinated to German general Otto Liman von
Sanders (18551929), Kemal took the initiative that established him as a great soldier
during the Allied amphibious landings of
April 1915. He immediately committed his
troops and led them in a series of fierce
counterattacks to combat the landings that
pinned the Allied troops to the beaches.
When the Allies tried another landing at
Suvla Bay on August 6, 1915, Kemal was
given command of that area as well. By
early 1916, when the Allies had evacuated
their forces, Kemal was hailed as the Savior
of Constantinople. Subsequently promoted
to general, he took command of XVI Corps
and continued his success against the Allies
in defending Anatolia in March 1916. He
was the only Turkish general to win victories
against the Russians.
Kemals accomplishments, as well as his
annoyance at being subordinate to the
Germans, so threatened and angered Enver
Pasha that he relieved him of command in
1917, placing him on sick leave. A year later,
with the German-Ottoman alliance facing
defeat by the Allies, Enver recalled Kemal to
command the Seventh Army in Palestine.
Outnumbered by General Sir Edmund H.
Allenbys (18611936) better-equipped
British forces, the best Kemal could achieve
was to extricate the bulk of his command
and withdraw first to Aleppo and then to the
Anotolian frontier, an orderly retreat that
saved his army.
With the Allied victory in the war and collapse of the Ottoman Empire, Kemal used
his assignment as inspector general of the
armies in eastern and northeastern Anatolia
to strengthen those elements working for a
free and independent Turkish nation. On
May 19, 1919, ignoring the sultans attempt
to remove him, Kemal issued orders that all

Turks fight for independence. In April


1920, Kemal established a provisional
government in Ankara. He became president
of the National Assembly in Ankara and
successfully directed Turkish forces in the
defeat of Greek forces in eastern Anatolia
during 19211922.
With the external threat overcome, Kemal
ended the sultanate on November 1, 1922.
The Treaty of Lausanne granted almost all
the concessions that Turkey demanded, and
Kemal proclaimed the Republic of Turkey
on October 29, 1923, with himself as
president. He then set about implementing
reforms that limited the influence of Islam
and introduced Western laws, dress, and
administrative functions.
Although an autocrat, Kemal, who took the
title Ataturk in 1934, encouraged cooperation
between the civil and military branches and
based his rule on the concept of equality of
all before the law. His achievements in every
field of national life were extraordinary and,
almost singlehandedly, he inspired Turkey to
take its place among the modern nations of
the world. Ataturk died on November 10,
1938, in Istanbul.
James H. Willbanks
See also: Gallipoli, 1915; Greco-Turkish War,
19191922; Ottoman Empire in World War I;
Sakarya River, Battle of, 1921

Further Reading
Erickson, Edward J. Ordered to Die: A History
of the Ottoman Army in the First World
War. Westport, CT: Greenwood, 2000.
Fewster, Kevin, Hatice Basarin, and Vesihi
Basarin. Gallipoli: The Turkish Story.
London: Allen and Unwin, 2004.
James, Robert Rhodes. Gallipoli: The History of a
Noble Blunder. New York: Macmillan, 1965.
Kinross, Lord. Ataturk: Biography of Mustapha Kemal, Father of Modern Turkey. New
York: William Morrow, 1965.

161

162

Kosovo, Battle of, 1915


Laffin, John. Damn the Dardanelles! The
Agony of Gallipoli. London: Osprey, 1980.
Macfie, A. L. Ataturk. New York: Longman,
1994.
Moorehead, Alan. Gallipoli. New York:
Harper, 1956.

Kosovo, Battle of, 1915


This battle was fought between the Serbian
army and the Bulgarian army and portions of
the German army in Kosovo between November 10 and December 4, 1915. In early 1915,
the German chief of the general staff Erich
von Falkenhayn (18611922) convinced the
Austro-Hungarian chief of staff Franz Conrad
von Hoetzendorf (18521925) to launch a
second invasion of Serbia. If this invasion succeeded, Serbia would be knocked out of the
war, and Germany and Austria-Hungary
would have a rail link to their other ally, the
Ottoman Empire. In September, Bulgaria, eyeing Serbian territory that the Bulgarians felt
was theirs, signed a treaty of alliance with
Germany and quickly mobilized its army.
Combined German and Austrian-Hungarian
forces invaded Serbia in October 7 and occupied Belgrade, the capital, two days later.
On October 14, 1915, the Bulgarian army
crossed the Serbian border across the northern
border toward Nis and across the southern
border toward Skopje and drove the Serbian
army back along both fronts. In early November, Marshal Radomir Putnik (18471917),
the Serbian commander in chief, attempted
to pull his two incomplete armies together to
halt the Bulgarian advance. However, on
November 10, the Bulgarian First Army
crossed the South Morava River and struck
the weakened Serbian army in the direction
of Nis and Pristina. For two days, the greatly
outnumbered Serbian army held Prokuplje
but eventually had to retreat.

The retreating Serbian army again


attempted to stop the advancing Bulgarians
near the city of Gnjilane. The Serbs then
tried a desperate counterattack toward Vranje
and Kumanovo to join Anglo-French troops
but were again defeated. On November 24,
units of the Bulgarian First Army took Pristina. The entire Bulgarian army, supported
from the north by parts of the Eleventh
German Army, now advanced against the
Serbians. The battle ended on December 4
with the capture of Debar. The Serbs lost
30,000 soldiers, 199 guns, 150 cars, and vast
quantities of other military equipment.
Following this battle and into early 1916,
over 400,000 defeated and worn-out Serbian
troops and civilian refugees retreated toward
the Adriatic coast through Albania in what
became known as the Great Serbian Retreat.
Allied ships transported about 130,000 Serbian soldiers and 60,000 Serbian refugees to
various Greek islands, including Corfu.
About 70,000 soldiers and 140,000 civilians
died in Albania of starvation, extreme
weather, and Albanian reprisals during the
retreat.
Robert B. Kane
See also: Bulgaria in World War I; Serbia,
Invasions of, 1915; Serbia in World War I

Further Reading
Adams, John Clinton. Flight in Winter.
Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press,
1942.
Fryer, Charles. The Destruction of Serbia in
1915. Boulder, CO: East European Monographs, 1997.
Krunich, Milutin, and Leah Marie Bruce. Serbia Crucified: The Beginning. Boston:
Houghton Mifflin Company, 1918.
Mitrovic, Andrej. Serbias Great War, 1914
1918. West Lafayette, IN: Purdue University Press, 2007.

Kosovo Liberation Army

Kosovo Liberation Army


The Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA; Ushtria Clirimtare e Kosoves) was a guerrilla
force that fought for Kosovos independence
from Yugoslavia, and later from Serbia.
Most of the groups members were ethnic
Albanians, who make up approximately
90 percent of Kosovos 2 million people.
Although the KLA officially disbanded in
July 1999, many of its commanders and
fighters joined forces with the National Liberation Army in Macedonia and other satellite organizations to continue their fight for
an independent Kosovo.
The KLA formed around 1990 as a small
band of peasants committed to the liberation
of Kosovo. The province had been an
autonomous region from 1974 to 1989, and
its degree of home rule was virtually equivalent to that of any republic of the former
Yugoslav federation. However, Kosovos
autonomy was rescinded in 1989 by
Yugoslav president Slobodan Milos evic
(19412006), who cited a need to suppress
separatism and protect non-Albanian ethnic
minorities living in Kosovo. For several
years, most Kosovar Albanians followed a
policy of nonviolence in their efforts to have
their autonomy restored. As severe repression
against ethnic Albanians by Serbian police
and Yugoslav army forces continued unabated
through the mid-1990s, the KLA began to
carry out well-planned attacks against carefully chosen Serbian targets. Beginning in
1997, open clashes erupted between KLA
rebels and government forces.
In 1998, Milosevic launched a crackdown
on the KLA and also on ethnic Albanian
villages throughout the province. In an effort
to ferret out the rebels, Serbian police
began terrorizing citizens suspected of
providing shelter or support for the KLA.

The crackdown drove many Kosovars into


the arms of the KLA, and the groups membership swelled to an estimated 35,000
fighters. In early 1999, the Serbs began a
heightened military campaign to destroy
the KLA, burning entire villages, driving
tens of thousands of civilians from their
homes, and causing many civilian casualties. The North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) responded to this aggression
by launching air strikes against Yugoslavia
to help prevent further attacks on Kosovar
Albanians.
By the onset of the NATO air strikes, the
KLAs force had dwindled to roughly 3,000
fighters. However, by June 1999, a groundswell of volunteer fighters from Albania
and from among fleeing refugees brought
the KLA force within Kosovo to an estimated 17,000with another 5,000 volunteers in training in Albania. Although
the KLA remained far outnumbered by
the heavily armed Yugoslav military, the
NATO air war hindered the mobility of
the Yugoslav troops, further equalizing the
battlefield. On June 9, NATO and Yugoslav
officials signed the Military-Technical
Agreement, paving the way for the complete
withdrawal of Serbian troops and the demilitarization of the KLA.
Despite the agreement, factions within the
KLA remained divided over the prospect of
disarmament under any peace plan negotiated between NATO and the Yugoslav
government. The groups most radical members formed a rival armed faction, the
Armed Forces of the Republic of Kosovo.
The splinter group comprised former KLA
members who refused to accept anything
less than full independence.
Although little was known about the
KLAs command structure, Hashim Thaci
(1968), leader of the Democratic Party

163

164

Kosovo War, 19981999

of Kosovo, emerged as its nominal head.


Former KLA commander Ramush Haradinaj (1968) became prime minister of
Kosovo in December 2004 but resigned in
March 2005 after being indicted for war
crimes charges tied to his time as a KLA
commander. Haradinaj surrendered to the
UN International Criminal Tribunal for
Yugoslavia in The Hague.
Lisa McCallum
See also: Kosovo War, 19981999

Further Reading
Clark, Wesley. Waging Modern War: Bosnia,
Kosovo and the Future of Combat. New
York: Public Affairs, 2001.
Glenny, Misha. The Balkans: Nationalism,
War and the Great Powers, 18041999.
New York: Viking, 1999.

Kosovo War, 19981999


During the 1980s, increasing Serbian repression radicalized many moderates among the
90 percent majority Albanian population in
the Serbian province of Kosovo. With the
threat of violence increasing, Ibrahim
Rugova (19442006), the elected president
of the Republic of Kosovo since 1992 but
not recognized by Yugoslavia, pleaded for a
UN peacekeeping force in Kosovo.
On April 22, 1996, the secret Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) carried out a series of
attacks against Serbian security personnel
throughout the province. When Albania collapsed into violence in 1997, a good deal of
that nations military hardware was looted
and found its way in the hands of the KLA
in western Kosovo. Although the United
States branded the KLA a terrorist organization, neither it nor other Western powers
made any effort to stem the flow of arms
and money to it.

The Yugoslav army responded to the KLA


attacks with considerable force, attacking
base areas in remote areas of Kosovo. In
the ensuing fighting, a number of civilians
were killed, sometimes deliberately.
Although the Serbs sought talks with
Rugova, he rejected any negotiations with
Serbian officials and insisted that the talks
be only with the Yugoslav government over
independence.
In May 1998, the Yugoslav army carried
out a major military operation in Kosovo,
Operation Horseshoe. This was intended to
drive much of the Albanian civilian population out of Kosovo. In response, the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)
launched in June an air demonstration,
Operation Determined Falcon, over the
Yugoslav borders.
President Slobodan Milos evic (1941
2006) reached an agreement with the
president of the Russian Federation, Boris
Yeltsin (19312007), to cease offensive
military operations and begin negotiations,
but Milosevic and Rugova met only once,
in Belgrade, on May 15. By this time, the
United States was clearly backing the KLA.
Heavy fighting occurred during the summer,
with atrocities committed by both sides and
the destruction of churches and mosques.
By the fall, with winter approaching, Serbian forces drove some 250,000 Albanians
from their homes in acts of ethnic cleansing.
U.S. diplomats attempted to hammer out a
deal in which the Yugoslav army halted its
attacks, while NATO peacekeeping troops
entered the province. At the same time, the
KLA was to drop its bid for independence.
A cease-fire agreement was brokered on
October 25, 1998. A Kosovo Verification
Mission was established with unarmed
observers.
The inadequacy of this effort was soon
apparent, as the violence increasingly

Kosovo War, 19981999

Kosovar refugees set up tents at a camp in Blace, Macedonia, April 1, 1999. (Getty Images)

shifted to urban areas, including assassinations and bombings on both sides. A turning
point in the war occurred on January 15,
1999, with the so-called Racak Massacre in
which a number of ethnic Albanians were
found murdered, their bodies mutilated.
Meanwhile, contentious and plodding
talks occurred at Rambouillet, France,
between the parties during February
March 1999, with NATO secretary-general
Javier Solana acting as a go-between. On
March 18 the Albanian, U.S., and British
representatives to the talks signed what
became known as the Rambouillet Accords.
This agreement called for the autonomy of
Kosovo, the development of democratic
institutions, and the protection of human
rights. This was to be guaranteed by an
invited international civilian and military
force. The Serb and Russian delegations
refused to sign the agreement, however.
The Serbs counterproposal was so extreme
as to be rejected even by their Russian ally.

With the Serbs recalcitrant, NATO


launched a bombing campaign during
March 12June 11, 1999. It was the first
time that NATO conducted a military campaign against a sovereign nation, and the
first military operation for the German air
force since World War II. All the NATO
powers participated to some degree, including Greece, whose government actually
opposed the war. In all, NATO carried out
some 38,000 sorties. The proclaimed goal
of the campaign was announced as Serbs
out, peacekeepers in, refugees back. That
is, Yugoslav troops had to leave Kosovo, to
be replaced by an international peacekeeping force so that ethnic Albanian refugees might return to their homes.
Clearly NATO planners initially underestimated the force that would be required.
Indeed, Milosevic was emboldened to intensify Serb efforts to clear Kosovo of its
Muslim non-Serb population, sending hundreds of thousands of refugees fleeing into

165

166

Kumanovo, Battle of, 1912

neighboring Bosnia, Albania, Montenegro,


and Macedonia. By April 1999, the UN
reported that nearly 850,000 peoplethe
vast majority of them ethnic Albanians
were driven from their homes.
In response, NATO intensified the air
effort, hitting not only strategic targets but
increasingly Yugoslav army units on the
ground, including individual tanks and artillery pieces. Dual-use targets struck include
infrastructure such as bridges over the Danube as well as television towers and political
party headquarters in Belgrade. On May 7,
1999, NATO bombs inadvertently hit the
Chinese embassy in Belgrade, killing three
and wounding 20, sharply straining relations
between Washington and Beijing and producing anti-American demonstrations
throughout China.
With NATO actively considering the dispatch of ground troops, which U.S. president
William J. Clinton (1946) opposed, in early
June 1999, Finnish president Martii Ahtisaari (1937), former Russian prime minister Viktor Chernomyrdin (19382010), and
London banker Peter Castenfelt convinced
Milosevic to back down and accept a peace
agreement that ended the war and halted
the NATO bombing campaign. On June 9,
NATO and the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia formally signed a peace agreement
that admitted a military presence, the
Kosovo Force, within Kosovo under the
UN but incorporating NATO forces.
On June 11, NATO troops (KFOR,
Kosovo Force) entered Kosovo in Operation
Joint Guardian as the Yugoslav army exited
the province. Although no NATO lives
were lost in the bombing campaign, as
many as 1,500 Serb civilians were killed.
NATO claims of military damage inflicted
were found to be inflated, and many of the
targets struck (such as tanks) turned out to
be decoys. This was a consequence of Serb

ingenuity that overcame NATO technology


but was also the result of restrictions to
minimize the chance of casualties among
the aircrews that had kept the NATO aircraft
above 15,000 feet.
The war left Kosovo in near chaos. Within
a matter of a few weeks, a half million
Kosovo refugees returned to the region. By
November, more than 800,000 had returned.
In Serbia, meanwhile, large demonstrations
called for the removal of Milos evic from
power. The Kosovo War was the major
factor driving him from power in 2000. On
February 17, 2008, Kosovo unilaterally
declared independence. The United States
and most European states recognized the
new state; Serbia and Russia did not. Around
10,000 KFOR troops remain in Kosovo.
Spencer C. Tucker
See also: Horseshoe, Operation, 1998; Kosovo
Liberation Army (KLA); NATO in the
Balkans

Further Reading
Clark, Wesley. Waging Modern War: Bosnia,
Kosovo and the Future of Combat. New
York: Public Affairs, 2001.
Glenny, Misha. The Balkans: Nationalism,
War and the Great Powers, 18041999.
New York: Viking, 1999.

Kumanovo, Battle of, 1912


The Treaty of Berlin had shaped the borders
of the Ottoman Balkans in such a way that it
was nearly impossible to defend it against
multiple enemies. Coupled with this,
Ottoman political and military leadership
determined to preserve every inch of the
empires territory, and they had great faith
in the military capacity of territorial defense
units. Moreover, overconfident general staff
officers insisted on being on the offensive

Kumanovo, Battle of, 1912

at the operational level while conducting


defensive operations at the strategic level,
which was a key element in the newly introduced German doctrine. They naively hoped
that the small militaries of the Balkan states
would not have the means to launch coordinated assaults, thereby giving Ottoman units
ample opportunities to defeat them one by
one. Ottoman planners disregarded all the viable alternatives and tried in vain to design a
war strategy that would fit these conflicting
ideas. The flawed outcome of all these priorities and factors was the grouping of available
units into two geographically isolated field
armies: the Western Army (Garb Ordusu),
and the Eastern Army (Sark Ordusu).
The Ottoman Western Army tried to
employ the strategic defense with the operational offensive. But in contrast to its eastern
sister, the Western Army divided its units
into the Vardar Army, four corps-sized
groups (Yanya, Ustruma, Iskodra, and Muretteb [redif/reserve] VIII Corps) and four
independent detachments in order to protect
every inch of its area of responsibility against
the concentric attacks of its four adversaries.
Additionally, only a bit more than half of the
assigned troops were mobilized due to a lack
of transportation and slow mobilization,
which further limited the armys chances of
success. The Ottoman planners identified the
Serbian army as the main threat and so tasked
the Vardar Army to block and then annihilate
it. Similarly, the Serbian commander in chief,
General Radomir Putnik (18471917) was
also looking for a decisive pitched battle by
making use of 11 infantry divisions and
combat support units to fix and envelop the
Ottoman units.
Most of the Vardar Army divisions had
to travel more than 100 kilometers in
order to reach their concentration area
near Kumonovo. The commanding general,
Halepli Zeki Pasha (18621943), employed

aggressive covering-force tactics, while some


of his divisions were still trying desperately
to reach their tactical destinations between
October 14 and 21. Zeki Pashas tactics
worked quite well and First Serbian Army
could not establish contact with the Second
Serbian Army. However, he did not wait for
his remaining four divisions to arrive, as he
thought the time was ripe for attack, even
though the Serbs had twice the number of
men on hand as the Ottomans. Three divisions
fixed the Serbs and three more launched
flanking attacks from both sides on October 23. The ambitious assault achieved
remarkable success initially but at the end of
the day, without effective artillery support
and reserves, Zeki Pasha was unable to tip
the balance in his favor. The ill-trained,
ill-equipped and poorly led redif divisions
began to waver, and massive Serbian artillery
fire crushed and demoralized them the next
day. Zeki Pasha somehow managed to keep
his demoralized redifs in their make-shift
defensive positions against the all-day-long
infantry assaults. However, panic seized
them immediately after Zeki Pasha ordered a
retreat, and all discipline and order was lost.
Mesut Uyar
See also: Ottoman Empire in the Balkan Wars;
Putnik, Radomir (18471917); Serbia in the
Balkan Wars

Further Reading
Erickson, Edward J. Defeat in Detail: The
Ottoman Army in the Balkans, 19121913.
Westport, CT: Praeger, 2003.
Hall, Richard C. The Balkan Wars, 1912
1913: Prelude to the First World War.
London: Routledge, 2000.
Hall, Res at. Balkan Harbi (19121913),
Garp Ordusu, Vardar Ordusu ve Ustruma
Kolordusu. Vol. 3, section 1, 2nd printing.
Ankara: Genelkurmay Basmevi, 1993.

167

L
Lake Prespa, Battle of, 1917

Sarrail commenced offensive operations


on March 11, 1917, striking northward in
the area between Monastir and Lake Prespa,
against the Bulgarian Sixth Vidin and Eighth
Tundhza Divisions. Milnes supporting
attack at Lake Dorian on the other side of
the Balkan Front began the next day.
Both sides suffered from the blizzard-like
late winter weather. The Bulgarian defenders used gas and flamethrowers to limit
the Entente attacks to gains of only a few
hundred yards. Bulgarian counterattacks
launched on March 17 pushed into the
western Entente flank and forced Sarrail to
abandon gains elsewhere. Entente troops
then withdrew to regroup. By March 22,
they were back at their starting points, having sustained some 14,000 casualties from
the fighting and sickness. The Bulgarians
lost 3,482 in the March fighting, and as
many as 2,000 prisoners. British attacks in
the Dorian sector resumed in late April,
and there was additional fighting in May
near Monastir by French and Serbian units,
and along the Struma River by British troops.
The Entente made some small gains during
the spring of 1917, but paid a heavy price
with losses of over 13,000 men. Afterward,
both sides were exhausted. Sarrail then halted
all offensive operations along the Balkan
Front. It remained relatively quiet until the
summer of 1918, when French general Louis
Franchet dEsperay (18561942) began preparations for the fall offensive that would force
Bulgaria out of the war.
Jon C. Anderson Jr.

The Battle of Lake Prespa, northwest


of Salonika, during March 1122, 1917,
occurred on the Balkan Front between
Central Powers forces from Bulgaria and
Germany, and Entente troops mainly from
France and Serbia. The Allied offensive,
launched at the lake on the Greek and
Serbian border, was undertaken to divert
German assets from the Nivelle Offensive
(April 16May 9, 1917) on the Western
Front. Toward that end, the Allied commanders in the Balkans, French general de
division Maurice Sarrail (18561929) and
British general George Milne (18661948),
were ordered to launch offensive operations.
Sarrail planned a repeat of the previous
years offensive by the Entente, which
had taken Monastir (Bitola) in Serbia the
previous November.
In January 1917, Sarrail received an additional four divisions. Officially, he commanded 600,000 men, but widespread
sickness and the need to defend Salonika
reduced the number of French and Serbian
troops available for offensive operations to
only some 100,000 men. These faced a similar number of Bulgarian and some German
soldiers, who were well dug in on high
ground. The British undertook a supporting
attack to the east at Lake Doiran against
the Bulgarian Ninth Pleven Division. The
Bulgarians were under the overall command
of German general Otto von Below
(18571944).

168

Lausanne, Treaty of, 1923


See also: Dobro Pole, Battle of, 1918; Doiran,
Battles of, 19151918; Macedonian Front,
19151918; Zhekov, Nikola (18641949)

Further Reading
Falls, Cyril. Military Operations: Macedonia.
2 vols. London: HMSO, 1933, 1935.
Markov, Georgi. Golyamata voina i Bulgarskata strazha mezhdu Sredna Evropa i
Orienta 19161919. Sofia: Prof. Marin
Drinov, 2006.
Palmer, Alan. The Gardiners of Salonika. New
York: Simon and Schuster, 1965.

Lausanne, Treaty of, 1923


The Treaty of Lausanne established peace
between the Allied powers and Turkey.
Unlike the Treaty of Se`vres, the terms of
which the Allies dictated to the Ottoman
government in 1920, the Treaty of Lausanne
signed on July 24, 1923, was a negotiated
peace. The Treaty of Se`vres had been a
humiliation for Turkey. Under its terms,
Greece assumed control over Smyrna and
the hinterland as well as all of Ottoman
Europe outside of Constantinople. The
treaty also removed the Arabic-speaking
lands and Armenia from Ottoman control
and established an autonomous Kurdistan
under League of Nations guidance. It fixed
the size of the Turkish army at 50,000 men,
and it also left in place the capitulations
that gave foreigners the right of extraterritoriality and established foreign control
over many aspects of the Turkish financial
system.
The terms of the treaty set off a wave
of nationalism in Turkey, personified in
Mustafa Kemal (18811938), known as
Ataturk. On August 19, 1920, the National
Assembly, called into session by the sultan
to approve the Treaty of Se` vres, instead
rejected it and denounced as traitors those

who had supported it. The sultan then


dissolved Parliament, which led Kemal to
establish a rival government in the interior
of Anatolia. He soon concluded an agreement with Russia that proved beneficial to
both nations. Turkey recognized Russian
incorporation of Azerbaijan, Georgia, and
half of Armenia. In return, Turkey received
surplus Russian arms and Russias diplomatic support, including its recognition of
Turkish control over the other half of
Armenia.
Kemal soon took advantage of the
Russian arms to go to war against Greece
in Smyrna. Although Greek prime minister
Eleuthe rios Venize los (18641936) sent
forces into Anatolia, Kemal carried out a
brilliant military campaign in the GrecoTurkish War of 19191922, during which
he retook Smyrna and its hinterland and
then turned north against Constantinople.
Italy, which had come to see Greece as a
more immediate rival than Turkey, agreed
to withdraw its own occupation troops
after a defeat at Kemals hands in Central
Anatolia. This led the British and French
also to depart.
Turkish success on the battlefield
produced gains at the bargaining table.
In November 1922, a conference to consider
revisions to the Treaty of Se`vres opened in
the Swiss city of Lausanne. Plenipotentiaries from eight nations negotiated there for
seven months. As evidence of their parity
at the conference, Turkish diplomats successfully rejected a draft treaty presented in
April 1923. The two sides resumed talks
until a revision met with the approval of all
parties in July.
The Treaty of Lausanne abrogated the
terms of the Treaty of Se`vres. It included
no provisions for the autonomy of Kurdistan, thus recognizing its reincorporation
into Turkey. The capitulations continued in

169

170

Levski, Vasil

theory, but only a handful of Western legal


and medical advisers remained in Turkey
after 1923. Eastern Thrace and all of Anatolia
returned to Turkish control, settling border
disputes with both Greece and Bulgaria. The
military terms of the treaty were also favorable to Turkey. Greece agreed not to fortify
its Aegean islands and also promised not to
fly military aircraft over Turkish airspace.
The treaty also resolved the delicate issue
of the Bosporus and the Dardanelles. The
International Straits Committee established
at Se`vres and composed of Great Britain,
France, and Italy remained in place, but Turkey became a member. More importantly,
the committee lost the right of intervention
granted in the previous treaty. Thereafter,
determinations about the security of the straits
were the preserve of the League of Nations. In
exchange for these concessions, Turkey recognized British control of Cyprus and Italian
authority in the Dodecanese Islands.
The treaty also freed Turkey from reparation payments that the Ottoman government
had accepted in the Treaty of Se`vres. In
return, Turkey agreed to pay outstanding
prewar debts incurred by the Ottomans to
the other signatories.
The treaty represented a major triumph
for Kemal and the Turkish nationalists.
Eleutherios Venizelos, former prime minister, signed for Greece. He had been one of
the most vocal supporters of Greek territorial aims in Turkey, and his signature symbolized the end of Greek designs across the
Aegean Sea. The United States and Russia,
although not signatories, lent support.
The treaty also led to one of the largest
forced movements of populations in history.
It took religion as a basis for defining ethnicity and implicitly argued that religious
minorities could not exist within the newly
created borders. As a result, more than
1.2 million Eastern Orthodox Christians

moved from Turkey to Greece, 150,000 of


them were from Constantinople (soon to
be renamed Istanbul). Similarly, 380,000
Muslims moved from Greece to Turkey.
The flood of refugees caused financial and
social problems for both nations.
The Treaty of Lausanne must be understood as a monumental triumph for Turkey.
It formally ended any chance of the return of
the sultanate, and it established Turkey as a
power in the Middle East, eastern Europe,
and Central Asia. The biggest losers under
the treaty were the independence-minded
Kurds and the Armenians who now had to
live under Turkish and Soviet control. The
treaty also significantly reduced tensions in
the region among Greece, Italy, and Turkey,
thus calming the Balkans considerably.
Michael S. Neiberg
See also: Greco-Turkish War, 19191922;
Kemal, Mustafa (18811938); Se`vres, Treaty
of, 1920

Further Reading
Busch, Briton Cooper. Mudros to Lausanne:
Britains Frontier in West Asia, 1918
1923. Albany: State University of New
York Press, 1976.
Kinross, Lord John Patrick Balfour. The Ottoman Centuries: The Rise and Fall of the
Turkish Empire. New York: Morrow, 1977.
Macfie, A. L. Ataturk. New York: Longman,
1994.
Macfie, A. L. The End of the Ottoman Empire,
19181923. London: Longman, 1998.
McCarthy, Justin. The Ottoman Peoples and
the End of Empire. London: Hodde Arnold,
2001.

Levski, Vasil (18371873)


Vasil Levski was a leading figure in the
Bulgarian struggle to achieve independence
from the Ottoman Empire. He was born

Little Entente

Vasil Ivanov Kunchev on July 18, 1837 (OS


July 6) in Karlovo in Ottoman ruled Bulgaria into a family of craftsmen. At first he
sought a religious avocation, entering a
monastery and becoming a deacon in 1859.
He soon became involved in activities promoting Bulgarian nationalism and independence from the Ottoman Empire.
In 1862, Levski joined the Bulgarian
Legion and fought in Serbia against the
Ottomans. In this fighting he gained the
name Levski, Leonine. He then returned
to Bulgaria and abandoned his religious calling. For the next six years, he taught school.
He joined the Second Bulgarian Legion in
Belgrade in 1868, but concluded that the
Legion was unlikely to achieve Bulgarian
independence. The next year, he helped to
found the Bulgarian Revolutionary Secret
Committee in Bucharest.
In 1870, Levski returned to Bulgaria to
work for the outbreak of armed revolution
against the Ottomans. He traveled around
Bulgaria to spread the idea of an independent Bulgaria and to organize revolutionary
groups who prepared to fight against the
Ottomans. Ottoman authorities arrested him
near Lovach in December 1872. On February 18, 1873 (OS February 6), the Ottomans
hung Levski in Sofia. The location of his
execution now has a monument dedicated
to him. His work and martyrdom helped to
prepare for the April Uprising of 1876, and
inspired many of its participants. Vasil Levski remains a heroic figure in the history of
the Bulgarian revival.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Bulgarian Horrors, 1876; RussoOttoman War, 18771878

Further Reading
Crampton, R. J. Bulgaria. Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 2007.

Genchev, Nikolai. Vasil Levski. Sofia: Voenno


izdatelstvo, 1987.
Macdermott, Mercia. The Apostle of Freedom.
London: G. Allen and Unwin, 1967.

Little Entente
The Little Entente was an interwar defensive
alliance comprised of Czechoslovakia,
Romania, and Yugoslavia, proposed by
Eduard Benes, foreign minister of Czechoslovakia. Benes saw the agreements as a
way to prevent the restoration of the Habsburgs and Hungarian revanchism after
World War I when the Treaty of Trianon
awarded the three countries substantial
territory of the Kingdom of Hungary.
A series of bilateral agreements were
signed: August 14, 1920, between Czechoslovakia and Yugoslavia; April 23, 1921,
between Czechoslovakia and Romania; and
June 7, 1921, between Romania and Yugoslavia, with subsequent treaties being
entered into by the member nations. The
accord between Yugoslavia and Romania
was aimed at Bulgaria, which had territorial
claims against both countries resulting from
the First and Second Balkan Wars. These
mutual assistance treaties called for aid in
the event of a Hungarian attack or, in the
case of Romania-Yugoslavia, aggression by
Bulgaria, but did not apply to other countries. Its greatest accomplishment was stopping twice the attempted restoration of
Habsburg ex-emperor Charles (18871922)
to the throne of Hungary in 1921.
The Hungarians nicknamed arrangement
the Little Entente. The French approved of
the alliance to replace its former ally of
Imperial Russia despite initial skepticism.
They viewed it as a necessity in a possible
future two-front war against Germany. France
strengthened its ties to the organization

171

172

London, Treaty of, 1913

through a series of bilateral treaties with the


members starting in 1924 with Czechoslovakia, 1926 with Romania, and 1927 with Yugoslavia. Because of lingering hostility between
Czechoslovakia and Poland over the possession of Teschen (Cieszyn, Tesn), the French
were never able to tie the Little Entente into
a larger anti-German eastern European alliance system including Poland.
With the rise of Nazi Germany after 1933,
the organization established, in Geneva, a
permanent Council of Foreign Ministers,
Secretariat, and Economic Council, all of
which attempted to encourage political and
economic cooperation. As the members
began to pursue more independent foreign
policies in the 1930s and French support
waned, the organization lost much of its
value. It played no role in the Czechoslovak
crisis of 1938. The Munich Agreement and
the German annexation of the Sudetenland
October 1938 effectively ended the alliance.
Thereafter, both the Romanian and Yugoslav
governments scrambled to established good
relations with Nazi Germany.
Gregory C. Ference
See also: Romanian Campaign in Hungary,
1919; Trianon, Treaty of, 1920

Further Reading
dam, Magda. The Little Entente and Europe
A
(19201929). Budapest: Academiai Kiado,
1993.
Campus, Eliza. The Little Entente and the
Balkan Entente. Bucharest: Editura
Academiei, 1978.

London, Treaty of, 1913


The Treaty of London was a peace settlement
of the First Balkan War signed on May 30,
1913, between representatives of the Balkan
allies Bulgaria, Greece, Montenegro, and

Serbia, and those of the Ottoman Empire.


The terms had already received the approval
of the London conference of Great Power
ambassadors, which had overseen the process
to ensure that the interests of the Great
Powers were upheld.
By terms of this settlement, the Ottomans
ceded all European territories west of a
more-or-less straight line drawn from Enez
(Enos) on the Aegean Sea to Midya
(Midia) on the Black Sea as well as the
island of Crete. The Great Powers reserved
for themselves the right to delineate the borders of the new state of Albania and the
Aegean Islands formerly under Ottoman
control. The Great Powers had already recognized the independence of Albania,
which had been proclaimed in Vlore on
November 28, 1912. The Great Powers also
assumed responsibility for handling the
financial issues resulting from the war.
The settlement proved to be ephemeral,
because of disputes among the Balkan allies
over the disposition of Ottoman territories.
In particular, the Bulgarians contested
Greek and Serbian claims to Macedonia.
Already on May 5, 1913, the Greeks and
Serbs had concluded an alliance against Bulgaria. This came into play on June 30, 1913,
when Bulgarian army units attacked Greek
and Serbian positions in southern Macedonia. The resulting Second Balkan War
ended in catastrophe for Bulgaria, when
Ottoman and Romanian forces entered the
war on the Greek and Serbian side. The
Treaty of Bucharest of August 10, 1913,
between Bulgaria on one hand, and Greece,
Romania, and Serbia on the other; and the
Treaty of Constantinople of September 30,
between Bulgaria and the Ottoman Empire,
ended hostilities of the Second Balkan War.
The settlement of World War I in turn superseded these treaties.
Richard C. Hall

Lyule BurgasBuni Hisar, Battle of, 1912


See also: Balkan War, First, 19121913; Bulgaria in the Balkan Wars; Greece in the Balkan
Wars; Montenegro in the Balkan Wars; Ottoman Empire in the Balkan Wars; Serbia in
the Balkan Wars

Further Reading
Hall, Richard C. The Balkan Wars, 1912
1913: Prelude to the First World War.
London: Routledge, 2000.
Helmreich, E. C. The Diplomacy of the Balkan
Wars, 19121913. Cambridge, MA: Harvard
University Press, 1938.
Rossos, Andrew. Russia and the Balkans:
Inter-Balkan Rivalries and Russian Foreign
Policy 19081914. Toronto: University of
Toronto Press, 1981.

Lyule BurgasBuni Hisar,


Battle of, 1912
The battle of Lyule BurgasBuni Hisar
(Turkish: Luleburgaz-Pinarhisar) was the
largest battle in terms of numbers of participants of the Balkan Wars, and the largest
land battle in Europe between the FrancoPrussian War and World War I.
The Bulgarian Third Army seized the
Ottoman Fortress of Lozengrad (Turkish:
Kirkilise) on October 23, 1912. After several
days of rest, the Bulgarian Third Army
together with the more westerly positioned
Bulgarian First Army resumed their advance
on October 27 as the Ottomans brought up
into Thrace additional forces from Constantinople. Meanwhile, the Bulgarian Second
Army screened the Ottoman fortress of
Adrianople.
On October 29, the aggressive commander
of the Bulgarian Third Army, General
Radko Dimitriev (18591918), attacked the

Ottomans along a 20-mile front between the


Thracian villages of Lyule Burgas on the
southern end and Buni Hisar to the north.
The Ottomans temporarily deflected the
Bulgarian attacks. General Vasil Kutinchevs
First Army appeared around Lyule Burgas
(18581941) on October 30. The addition of
the First Army gave the Bulgarians around
110,000 men against Abdullah Pashas
(18461937) 130,000 Ottomans. The First
Army turned the Ottoman flank. By October 31, the Ottoman left flank collapsed. The
Ottoman forces then fled the battlefield
toward Constantinople. Only the Chataldzha
fortifications remained between the Bulgarians and the Ottoman capital.
General Dimitriev deserves credit for this
victory. Had the Bulgarians begun an immediate pursuit, they might have destroyed the
Ottoman forces. Bulgarian casualties and
exhaustion prevented this. The Bulgarians
lost 20,162 men including 2,534 dead.
Most were in the more heavily engaged
Third Army. The Ottomans lost around
22,000 men and at least 45 guns.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Balkan War, First, 19121913; Bulgaria in the Balkan Wars; Chataldzha, Battle
of, 1912; Dimitriev, Radko (18591918);
Ottoman Empire in the Balkan Wars

Further Reading
Erickson, Edward J. Defeat in Detail: The
Ottoman Army in the Balkans, 19121913.
Westport, CT: Praeger, 2003.
Hall, Richard C. The Balkan Wars, 1912
1913: Prelude to the First World War.
London: Routledge, 2000.
Vachkov, Alexander. The Balkan War 1912
1913. Sofia: Anzhela, 2005.

173

M
Macedonia

regent, Antipater, gained control. Antipater


and his son Cassander managed to control
Macedonia and Greece until about 297 BC,
but when Cassander died, Macedonia fell
into confusion and conflict once more. The
Antigonids won control of the region in
277 BC but were ousted by the Romans in
197 BC. The Romans, who made Macedonia
a province in 148 BC, retained control until
the Roman Empire came to an end at the
close of the fourth century AD. At that time,
Macedonia became part of the Byzantine
Empire and fell prey to a series of invasions
by Goths, Huns, Vandals, and Bulgars. Large
numbers of Slavs from other parts of eastern
Europe settled in Macedonia during the sixth
century.
The next significant epoch of Macedonian
history lasted from 1371 to 1912, which
marked the rule of the Ottoman Empire. The
Ottomans had gained control by defeating
challenges from Serbia, Bulgaria, and other
countries. The period of Ottoman control
was not smooth. There was extensive unrest
because of tensions between Christians and
Muslims, and by the end of the nineteenth
century, Greece, Bulgaria, and Serbia all
claimed Macedonia, which complicated
the conflict over the region. In 1903, the
Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization (VMRO), led the so-called Ilinden
(St. Elijahs Day) revolt against Ottoman
rule. It was soon crushed. In an effort to end
Ottoman rule in Macedonia, the Bulgarians
and Serbs, with the support of Russia, concluded an alliance in March 1912. In a secret
codicil to the alliance, they agreed to a

Although Macedonia is a small nation that


recently seceded from Yugoslavia, it was in
ancient times a huge empire that was home
to Alexander the Great, one of the greatest
warriors the world has known.
The first known residents of Macedonia
were Neolithic peoples who settled in the
northern part of the country around
6200 BC. About 3,000 years later, Greekspeaking shepherd tribes settled in the
mountain regions and then on the plains
between the Aliakmon and Axios Rivers.
The people of the region came to be known
as Macedonians after around 700 BC, at
which time much of the region was in the
hands of the Greeks, who considered the
indigenous peoples barbaric. The Greek
control of much of the area forced the
Macedonians, under Amynas III, to focus
on unifying the plain and upland regions.
Amynass son Philip II ruled in the fourth
century BC and was instrumental in expanding Macedonia northward. In 338 BC, he
conquered Greece and established a huge
empire that was expanded further by his
son, Alexander the Great, after Philip was
murdered in 336.
Alexander the Great expanded the empire
to cover Persia and Egypt and as far as
northern India. His reign was a time of great
cultural and artistic growth, but he died without a clear heir. Without a smooth succession,
the empire dissolved into a number of small
kingdoms that were divided by warfare for
about 20 years, when Alexanders European

174

Macedonia

partition of Macedonia, but left a disputed


section, the contested zone, to Russian arbitration. Greece and Montenegro joined the
Balkan League later that year.
In the first of the Balkan Wars (1912
1913), Greece, Bulgaria, and Serbia wrested
control of the region from the Turks, but
they then fell into disagreement among
themselves. The Second Balkan War (1913)
was fought among those three nations and
resulted in the division of the region among
them with most of the territory taken by
Greece and Serbia. During World War I,
Bulgaria occupied the region. Bulgarias
defeat at the end of the war returned most
of Macedonia to Greek and Serbian rule.
After World War I, Macedonia was reabsorbed into Serbia, which was part of the
Kingdom of the Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes,
and which became known as Yugoslavia in
1929. The union was short-lived. During
World War II, Yugoslavia was broken up
and distributed among Italy, Germany, and
Hungary with most of Yugoslav Macedonia
again occupied by Bulgaria between 1941
and 1944. Internal fighting among the Yugoslav peoples at that time saw most of the
Macedonian support going to partisan leader
Josip Broz Tito (18921980). In 1944, the
partisans met and agreed that Yugoslav
Macedonia would become part of a future
Yugoslav federation. When Tito formed his
new nation, he recognized the Macedonians
as a distinct ethnic group, supported the creation of an independent Macedonian church,
and even printed a standard grammar for the
Macedonian language.
Macedonia remained a republic within
Yugoslavia, a Communist state, until
the early 1990s. In 1990, the republics
government claimed that Serbia, Yugoslavias dominant republic, planned to annex
Macedonia. The Macedonians were already
dissatisfied with the Yugoslav federation

following Titos 1980 death, and tensions


grew. The League of Communists of
Yugoslavia gave up power in 1990, and in
Macedonia, the League of Communists of
Macedonia was defeated in multiparty elections. Yugoslavias constituent republics
jockeyed for increased autonomy. In
June 1991, Macedonia dropped the word
Socialist from its official name. Afraid
that the secession of Croatia and Slovenia
would increase Serbias power, the republics population voted overwhelmingly in
support of secession in a September 8,
1991, referendum, although Albanians and
Serbs who lived in the republic boycotted
the vote. There was some tension between
Serbia and Macedonia, but the violence
seen in Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina
after those republics left the federation did
not materialize in Macedonia. Macedonia
seceded from Yugoslavia in November
1991.
Although secession did not bring with it
violence, Macedonian independence did
cause some serious problems. The most
notable of those problems was the initial
refusal of the international community
driven by Greeceto recognize the new
nation. Greece insisted that the name Macedonia was Greek and that the new nation
had articles in its new 1991 Constitution
that suggested it had territorial ambitions
regarding the Greek province of the same
name. Athens also objected to Skopjes use
of the Star of Vergina, which had been
Alexander the Greats emblem, on its flag.
Greece blocked recognition by the European
Community (now the European Union) and
refused to negotiate with Macedonia, even
after the government amended the Macedonian Constitution to claim that it had no
interest in territorial expansion into Greece.
The lack of recognition created economic
difficulties. Greece blockaded Macedonia,

175

176

Macedonian Front, 19151918

and its other possible supplier, Serbia, was


the subject of a UN embargo that Macedonia
observed even though it was not itself recognized. The nations economic difficulties
worsened because the rejection of recognition made it impossible to gain foreign aid
or loans. Macedonia was finally admitted
into the United Nations in 1992 as the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia.
Other problems remained; the nations ethnic Albanians lobbied for greater rights,
which led to riots in Skopje in 1992 and
new riots in 1995 over the governments
rejection of the establishment of an
Albanian-language university in Tetovo. In
addition, thousands of Bosnians flooded the
nation in efforts to escape the war in their
homeland. Clashes between Macedonias
army and ethnic Albanian guerrillas continued into 2001.
The fate of the nations new democratic
institutions, which had already been challenged by claims of electoral fraud, were
thrown into doubt when President Kiro Gligorov (19172012) barely survived a bomb
attack in 1995. Constitutionally mandated
methods for the appointment of a temporary
leader eased many of those fears, although
Gligorov was not able to return to office.
Boris Trajkovski (19562004) was elected
president of Macedonia in December 1999.
In February 2004, Trajkovski was tragically
killed in a plane crash. His successor, former
prime minister Branko Crvenkovski
(1962), was elected in April 2004.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Balkan League, 1912; Contested
Zone (Macedonia), 1912; Ilinden Uprising,
1903; Macedonian War, 2001; VMRO

Further Reading
Cosmopoulos, Michael B. Macedonia: An
Introduction to Its Political History.

Winnipeg: Manitoba Studies in Classical


Civilization, 1992.
Philips, John. Macedonia: Warlords and Rebels in the Balkans. New Haven, CT: Yale
University Press, 2004.
Poulten, Hugh. Who Are the Macedonians?
Bloomington: Indiana University Press,
1995.
Rossos, Andrew. Macedonia and the Macedonians: A History. Stanford, CA: Stanford
University Press, 2008.
Roudometof, Victor, ed. The Macedonian
Question: Culture, Historiography,
Politics, Boulder, CO: East European
Monographs, 2000.

Macedonian Front, 19151918


The Macedonian Front was the line of
conflict established between mainly
Bulgarian forces, augmented by some
Austro-Hungarian and German units, and
Entente forces, which contained contingents
from most of the Entente powers, during
World War I in southeastern Europe. The
Macedonian Front extended from the Adriatic Sea in Albania across the Balkan Peninsula to the Aegean Sea in contemporary
Greece. Fighting developed in this region
in October 1915 when the Bulgarians joined
in a joint Austro-Hungarian and German
attack on Serbia. British and French units
landed at the neutral Greek port of Salonika
and moved northward up the Vardar River
valley in an effort to help the beleaguered
Serbs. The Bulgarians under the overall
command of General Nikola Zhekov
(18951949) stopped this attempt and
forced the Entente units back across the
Greek frontier in December 1915. Their
German allies forbade the Bulgarians from
pursuing the British and French, primarily
because they preferred to keep them

Macedonian Front, 19151918

confined around Salonika rather than to face


them on the Western Front.
At the beginning of 1916, the Bulgarians
established defensive positions along the
Greek frontier. These stretched from the
mouth of the Struma River on the Aegean
westward to the Shkumba River in Albania.
In Albania, Austro-Hungarian troops confronted Italians in an extension of the front.
There the front remained largely static for
most of the war. Meanwhile, the Entente
built up its forces in Salonika. French
colonial, Italian, Russian, and Serbian units
joined those of the British and French.
French general Maurice Sarrail (1856
1929) oversaw the Entente increase in forces
and establishment of a strong base in Salonika and positions in the hills of southern
Macedonia confronting the Bulgarians. In
the spring of 1916, the Germans lifted their
ban on intrusion into Greek territory. The
Bulgarians gained a bloodless victory when
the Greek garrison of Fort Rupel, which
commanded the flow of the Struma River
into Greece, surrendered to them on
May 26, 1916. In the summer of 1916, with
Romanian intervention into the war on the
Entente side pending, both sides prepared
offensives. The Bulgarians were the first to
act. Beginning on August 17, they advanced
on two wings of their front. In the east they
quickly occupied southeastern Macedonia,
including the towns of Drama and Seres
and the port of Kavala. In the west they
advanced to Florina. An Entente offensive,
however, threw the Bulgarians out of Florina
and pushed them back as far as Bitola,
which Serbian troops entered on November 19, 1916. This marked the return of
Serbian forces to their prewar territory.
After the fall of Bitola, fighting along the
Macedonian Front died down. It remained
relatively inactive during 1917. The Entente
forces undertook a few desultory attacks on

the Bulgarian positions, without much success. During this time, Entente command
withdrew the Russian contingents from the
front because news of the revolution at
home had made them combat ineffective.
They were all gone by the beginning of
1918. The entry of Greece on the Entente
side on July 2, 1917, brought the Greek
army to the Macedonian Front. This more
than made up for the loss of the Russians.
At the end of 1917, General Sarrail was
recalled to France. General Louis Guillaumat (18631940), a veteran of the Verdun
fighting, replaced him.
Meanwhile, the relative lull of 1917 had
an erosive effect on the Central Powers
forces. In the fall of 1917, the Germans
withdrew much of their manpower and
material for use in the planned great Western
Front offensive. They maintained a presence
on the Macedonian Front with Army Group
Scholtz, which consisted of the command
structure in charge of the German Eleventh
Army and the Bulgarian First Army. By
this time most of the units in the German
Eleventh Army were themselves Bulgarian.
At the same time, the material condition of
the Bulgarians seriously declined. Bulgarian
soldiers lacked adequate boots, clothing,
and food. The food crisis extended through
the entire country. Bulgarians were exhausted from their efforts at war, which extended
back to 1912 and the First Balkan War.
Disorders erupted in the Bulgarian ranks in
the summer of 1918.
In June 1918, the aggressive General
Franchet dEsperay (18561942) replaced
Guillaumat as commander of the Entente
forces. Entente attacks on Bulgarian positions correspondingly increased during the
summer of 1918. The Bulgarians suffered a
serious reversal when the Greek army
together with some French units attacked
the fortified ridge at Yerbichna (Skra di

177

178

Macedonian War, 2001

Legen) at the beginning of June 1918. By this


time, Bulgarian morale was too for army
commanders to contemplate a counterattack.
On September 13, 1918, concentrated
Entente artillery fire on the Bulgarian positions at Dobro Pole began the decisive battle
of the Macedonian Front. The next morning
French, French Colonial, and Serbian units
assaulted the Bulgarian positions. After two
days of heavy fighting, the Bulgarian lines
collapsed. This afforded the Entente soldiers
access to the Vardar River valley and a relatively easy route into Macedonia. To the east
of Dobro Pole, a supplementary Entente
offensive at Doiran undertaken by British
and Greek units failed. Nevertheless, as the
French and Serbs surged through the gap at
Dobro Pole, Bulgarian units on either side
had to withdraw.
The entire Macedonian Front began
to cave in. The Austro-Hungarians and
Germans, already hard pressed on other
fronts, made some effort to rush divisions
to Macedonia to strengthen the Bulgarians.
Meanwhile, discipline in at least two Bulgarian divisions collapsed. Demoralized
and disaffected troops refused orders and
streamed to the rear. They were determined
to go to Sofia to punish those members of
the political elite they held responsible for
all their suffering. In these disastrous
circumstances, the Bulgarian government
decided to leave the war. Its representatives
signed an armistice with the Entente in
Salonika on September 29. It took effect
the next day.
The Austro-Hungarian and German
divisions arrived too late to prevent the
Bulgarians from leaving the war, but in
time to defeat the attempt of the rebel
Bulgarian soldiers to reach Sofia. The
Bulgarian government and monarchy survived the second Bulgarian military defeat
in six years. Meanwhile, the Entente forces

advanced deep into Macedonia and on into


Serbia. They reached Skoplje on September 29 and Belgrade on November 1. Like
the Western Front, the Macedonian Front
remained relatively firm through most of
the war. Its collapse at Dobro Pole in September 1918, however, heralded the end of
the war where it began, in southeastern
Europe.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Dobro Pole, Battle of, 1918; Doiran,
Battles of, 19151918; Zhekov, Nikola (1864
1949)

Further Reading
Falls, Cyril. Military Operations, Macedonia.
2 vols. Nashville, TN: Battery Press, 1996.
Hall, Richard C. Balkan Breakthrough: The
Battle of Dobro Pole 1918. Bloomington:
Indiana University Press, 2010.
Palmer, Alan. The Gardeners of Salonika. New
York: Simon and Schuster, 1965.

Macedonian War, 2001


The Macedonian War was an armed conflict
between ethnic Albanian nationalists represented by the Albanian National Liberation
Army (NLA), and the security forces of the
Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia
(FYROM; henceforth, Macedonia). The
conflict began in January 2001 and ended
in August 2001 following the signing of the
Ohrid Framework Agreement.
The conflict in Macedonia stemmed from
longstanding grievances held by Macedonias ethnic Albanian community against
the government of Macedonia. Albanians
are Macedonias largest ethnic minority,
comprising approximately 25 percent of its
population. Macedonias 1991 secession
from Yugoslavia was remarkably peaceful,
and relations between Macedonians and

Macedonian War, 2001

Macedonian special police forces officers and press photographers run for cover in Tetovo
as Macedonian guns began pounding ethnic Albanian rebel positions in the hills above the
city, March 22, 2001. (AP Photo/CTK/Otto Ballon Mierny)

Albanians remained stable until the late


1990s, when ethnic Albanians began to
mount increasing grievances against the
Macedonian government. Grievances included demands to make Albanian a constitutionally designated official language of
Macedonia; improved Albanian-language
education (including state recognition of an
Albanian-language university in the city of
Tetovo), and greater access to employment.
In 1994, ethnic Albanians in western
Macedonia declared themselves part of an
autonomous republic called Illyrida, and in
1997, the Albanian flag was illegally raised
alongside the Macedonian flag in the cities
of Gostivar and Tetovo. These acts triggered
fears amongst Macedonians of an attempt to
create a Greater Albania.
The 1999 conflict in Kosovo and subsequent military intervention by the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)

triggered a massive refugee crisis in


Macedonia as 360,000 displaced Kosovar
Albanians (as much as 18 percent of Macedonias total population) crossed Macedonias porous northwestern border. This
sudden influx of ethnic Albanians, including
many veterans of the Kosovo Liberation
Army (KLA), in conjunction with mounting
ethnic grievances, pushed Macedonia past
the tipping point of war.
Violence erupted on January 22, 2001, in
the city of Tanus evci, when a group of
NLA supporters armed with hand grenades
attacked the local Macedonian police station. Four days later, on January 26, 2001,
a second attack took place as the NLA
claimed responsibility for a train bombing.
Tensions remained high and attacks against
Macedonian police continued, reaching a
flashpoint on March 22, 2001, when an
Albanian father and son suspected of

179

180

Mahmud II, Ottoman Sultan

carrying a grenade were killed by police at a


checkpoint. The NLA was told to leave Macedonia but rejected this ultimatum, and the
Macedonian offensive began on March 25,
2001. Violence continued through the spring
and summer, until a cease-fire agreement
was signed on July 5, 2001, to be enforced
by NATO. However, the NLA refused to
uphold this agreement and continued to
engage in increasingly brutal violence against
the state.
The Ohrid Framework Agreement, signed
on August 13, 2001, officially ended the war
in Macedonia. The agreement granted many
Albanian demands, including making Albanian an official language. In exchange, the
Albanians agreed to recognize the authority
of the Macedonian government and to disband the NLA. The NLA was not an official
party to the discussions leading up to the
agreement, and a NATO mission, Operation
Essential Harvest, began on August 22,
2001, with a 30-day mandate to ensure the
disarmament of the NLA.
Mary Kate Schneider
See also: Kosovo War, 19981999; Yugoslav
Wars, 19911995, Consequences

Further Reading
Judah, Tim. Greater Albania? Survival 43,
no. 2 (Summer 2001): 718.
Neofotistos, Vasiliki P. The Risk of War:
Everyday Sociality in the Republic of
Macedonia. Philadelphia: University of
Pennsylvania Press, 2012.
Ortakovski, Vladimir T. Interethnic
Relations in the Republic of Macedonia.
Southeastern European Politics 2, no. 1
(May 2001): 2445.
Phillips, John. Macedonia: Warlords and Rebels in the Balkans. New Haven, CT: Yale
University Press, 2004.

Mahmud II, Ottoman Sultan


(17851839)
Born at Topkap Palace in Constantinople on
20 July 20, 1785, as the youngest son of
Sultan Abdulhamid I (17251789), Mahmud succeeded to Mustafa IV on July 28,
1808, following an armed coup led by
Alemdar Mustafa Pasha (17551808).
Alemdar had aimed at restoring to the throne
the formerly deposed sultan Selim III
(17611808). Because Selim was assassinated before his arrival to the Topkapi Palace, Alemdar declared Mahmud as the new
sultan. The latter appointed Alemdar the
grand vizier and convened an assembly of
provincial rulers in Constantinople that
adopted the Deed of Agreement (Sened-i
Ittifak). This constitution-like document
sought to legitimize the status of local
powerholders as semi-independent tax
collectors and military contractors of
the central government. In mid-November
1808, however, popular uprising led by the
Janissaries deposed Alemdar Mustafas
government. It was the culmination of a
movement opposed to the establishment of
new military units as well as to the seizure
of the central government by provincial
elements.
Following the end of the Russo-Ottoman
War of 18061812 with the Treaty of
Bucharest (May 28, 1812), Mahmud initiated a gradual policy designed to restore
central authority over the provinces. In the
first years of the 1820s, he succeeded in
reasserting its power over most of the provincial centers in Anatolia as well as over
Thrace, Macedonia, and the Danube districts. The elimination of some local Muslim
notables, especially that of Tepedelenli Ali
Pasha in Epirus, facilitated the emergence

Mahmud II, Ottoman Sultan

of the Serbian and Greek national movements. In Arabia, the Wahhabite insurgency
was crushed down by the troops of Muhammad Ali Pasha (17691849), the governor of
Egypt.
While still maintaining his allegiance
to the sultan, Muhammad Ali gradually
transformed his province into a semiindependent unit with its newly established
regular army. When the Ottoman forces
proved incapable to subdue the Greek rebellion begun in 1821, the sultan once again
appealed to Muhammad Ali for assistance,
promising to cede to him the governorship
of Crete and the Peloponnesus in return for
his services. By April 1826, the Greek rising
came to an end, and it seemed to Mahmud
that the time had come to carry out the
expected military reform. The aimed project
was to establish new trained regular troops
within the Janissary corps. He previosuly
ensured the support of the religious and
bureaucratic elites as well as some of the
upper Janissary officers.
Nevertheless, three weeks after the new
Eshkindji units started their European-style
drills, the Janissaries rose up in arms on the
night of June 14. The sultan reacted with
speed and determination. A joint force
composed of the loyal troops, some of the
Muslim population of Istanbul, and religious
students managed to defeat the rebels on
June 15 with considerable bloodshed. Two
days later, an imperial order declared the
Janissary corps abolished. Thus, the last
great organized force that had stood in the
way of restructuring the military and the
political centralizing project was removed.
Instead, a new professional central army
was established under the name of Asakir-i
Mansure-i Muhammediyye (Victorious
Troops of Muhammad). The new units
were trained on contemporary European
drills. Their first instructors were a few

Ottoman officers who had had experience


with the former attempts of Sultan Selim
III and Alemdar. Shortly thereafter, Husrev
Pasha (17691855), the second commander
in chief (serasker), has changed the drill
sysytem. He appointed a French drill
sergeant the instructor of the infantry
units and a Piedmentose officer that of the
cavalry squadrons. In this process, the sultan
appeared as the first Ottoman sultan wearing
a uniform-like European dress with the
Egyptian fez on his head. Most of the soldiers enrolled in Asakir-i Mansure were
from the Turkish-speaking population of
Rumelia and Anatolia. Muslim nomadic
and tribal communities such as Turkmens,
Kurds, Albanians, and Lazes resisted service
as regular full-time soldiers, but took part in
the expeditions as contractual auxiliary
forces as part-time contractual warriors.
Non-Muslim Ottoman subjects were totally
kept outside of the army and had only
minor representation in the navy.
In the 1830s, many expeditions were
launched with regular troops and auxiliary
forces of irregular soldiers against the tribes
in Bosnia, Albania, southeastern Anatolia,
and Iraq who rebelled against forced conscription and paying increased taxes. Forced
volunteers mobilized during the 18281829
Russo-Ottoman War, and the two battles
against the Egyptian forces of Muhammad
Ali (18321833; 1839) proved to be ineffective. In 1834, a provincial militia (Redif) was
established to provide the regular army with
reserve forces. Sultan Mahmud and Husvre
Pasha (17691855) filled the commanding
posts of the new army with their favorites
and slaves, most of whom were not skilled
and educated officers. The Ottoman Military
Academy started to function at the end
of 1836. At the same time, professional
European officers were replaced by official
military missions sent by European states.

181

182

Mahmud Muhtar Pasha

Foreign officers and engineers were also


employed in the modernization of Ottoman
arms industry to be runned with steam
machinery.
In spite of all his efforts, Mahmud II was
not able to see his military forces defeating
the the Greeks and their allies. The BritishRussian-French joint fleet destroyed the
Ottoman-Egyptian navy on October 20,
1827, inside the harbor of Navarino. The
18281829 Russo-Ottoman War ended in
defeat. Finally, the Ottoman army lost
twice against the Egyptian troops of
Muhammad Ali. Only the intervention of
the European Great Powers prevented their
advance toward Constantinople. By the
Treaty of Adrianople (September 14, 1829),
the Ottoman state agreed to cede to Russia
the Danube delta in Europe and the province
of Akhaltsikhe. A heavy war indemnity and
the recognition of the autonomy of Serbia,
Moldavia, Wallachia, and Greece were
other clauses. The Convention of Kutahya
(April 8, 1833) conferred on Muhammad
Ali the government of Syria and the province of Adana. On June 24, the Egyptians,
once again, decisively routed the Ottoman
army at Nizib. On July 1, Mahmud died,
probably without learning of his armys last
defeat.
Gultekin Yildiz
See also: Mehmet Ali (17691849); RussoOttoman War, 18061812; Russo-Ottoman
War, 18281829

Further Reading
Aksan, Virginia H. Ottoman Wars, 1700
1870: An Empire Besieged. London: Pearson Longman, 2007.
Aktepe, M. Mu nir-Levy, A. Mahmud. In
Encyclopaedia of Islam, Second Edition,
edited by P. Bearman, Th. Bianquis, C. E.
Bosworth, E. Van Donzel, and W. P. Heinrichs. Leiden: Brill, 2009.

Yldz, Gu ltekin. Neferin Ad Yok: Zorunlu


Askerlige Gecis Surecinde Osmanl Devletinde Siyaset, Ordu ve Toplum (1826
1839). Istanbul: Kitabevi, 2009.

Mahmud Muhtar Pasha


(18661935)
Mahmud Muhtar, Ottoman general during
the Balkan Wars, was born in Constantinople on December 11, 1866. He attended the
Galatasaray Imperial High School, where
he found the opportunity to learn French.
In 1885, however, he was removed by his
father from the Galatasaray and sent to
the Ottoman Military Academy (Mekteb-i
Harbiyye). The same year, he was sent with
a group of Ottoman cadets to the German
Military Academy in Metz. He graduated
as lieutenant in 1888 and entered into the
Second Infantry Regiment of Guards in
Berlin. Simultaneously he attended courses
at the Staff College in Berlin. After graduating as a staff officer, he returned to Constantinople and became staff instructor at the
Harbiye. As colonel of a cavalry regiment
of the Salonika Army, Mahmud Muhtar
took part in the 1897 Greco-Ottoman War.
He distinguished himself in the battles of
Velestin and Domeke by attacking and capturing a Greek battery placed on the summit
of a hill. Seriously wounded toward the
end of this cavalry charge uphill, he was
returned home soon after the encounter.
Mahmud Muhtar left the Ottoman capital
for Egypt in 1903 and stayed there until the
declaration of the Turkish constitution in
1908. Then he was promoted to the rank of
general and appointed commander of the
First Division of Imperial Guards (Hassa
Ordusu) located in Istanbul. Though not a
member of the Committee of Union and
Progress, he was a fervent partisan of

Mahmud Muhtar Pasha

constitutional government. In the military


mutiny of April 13, 1909, Mahmud Muhtar
took immediate action against the rebels.
He held the War Ministry with his troops
and resisted the insurgents until the final resignation of the Cabinet. Upon learning that
the insurgents threatened his life, he
escapeed from Constantinople for Salonika
with the help from the German and British
embassies. He returned to Constantinople
following the dethronement of Abdulhamid
II (18421918) by the Young Turks.
In May 1909, however, a law was passed
reducing the ranks of army officers who
had not attended the Staff College. As his
diploma from the German Staff College
was no more deemed valid, Mahmud Muhtar Pashas rank was reduced to that of
colonel. During the early constitutional
period, Mahmud Muhtar served as the governor of Izmir from June 1909 to 1911. At
the beginning of 1911, he was appointed
minister of marine. When the Balkan War
broke out in the next year, Mahmud Muhtar
Pasha requested active military service.
Holding the rank of major-general, he first
commanded the Third Army Corps on the
right wing of the Eastern Army (Thracian
Army). In the early days of war mobilization, the Third Army Corps was located in
Krkkilise (today Krklareli) to ensure a
slower retreat toward Vize and Saray in the
case of a superior enemy attack. As the inital
defeat at Krkkilise was caused mainly by
the panic of Ottoman troops, he rallied
the soldiers and succeeded in checking
the Bulgarian advance between Vize and
Pnarhisar. According to him, the main deficiencies of Ottoman army during the Balkan
War were the untrained soldiers, unfinished
road constructions, and bad sanitation and
logistics as well as the absence of skilled
and active officers. He also found the main
point of assembly as unproper. His choice

was Ergene instead of the Edirne-Krkkilise


Line.
Mahmud Muhtar personnally commanded skirmishes around Vize between
October 2830 and even made attacks
against Bulgarians the following two days.
On 1 November 1, he was appointed the
commander of the new established Second
Eastern Army and charged to organize the
Terkos-C atalca line of defense, which
barred the way to Istanbul. On 17 November 17, 1912, during the Bulgarian attack
on the C
atalca positions, Mahmud Muhtar
began a counterattack. While leading his
men at the front, he fell badly wounded and
left the battlefield.
In February 1913, Mahmud Muhtar went
to Berlin as the Ottoman ambassador.
While there, he advised the Ottoman
government to remain neutral in the coming
war. Subsequently, he was removed from
the post with the signing of the GermanOttoman alliance. He did not return home,
however, and remained in Germany. Later,
he moved to Switzerland. In 1916, Muhtar
wrote to ask for an active military appointment. Enver Pasha (18811922), then the
minister of war, offered him an inspectorship of the Eastern Anatolian armies. Upon
his refusal of this offer, Mahmud Muhtar
was pensioned off and debarred from active
service.
After nine years living abroad, he
returned in 1922 with his family to Constantinople. In the summer of 1929, while undergoing a cancer treatment in Switzerland, he
was informed that the Turkish government
now held him responsible for the payment
due for the the battleships ordered while he
was minister of marine in 1912. He opened
a lawsuit against the state, which ended
with the probably inevitable conclusion of
his responsibility for the debt being confirmed. He never returned to his homeland.

183

184

Marasesti, Battle of, 1917

Mahmud Muhtar suffered a heart attack


during a ship travel from Egypt to Italy and
died on March 18, 1935. He was buried in
the Imam Shafei Cemetary near Cairo.
Gultekin Yildiz
See also: Chataldzha, Battle of, 1912; GrecoOttoman War, 1897; Lyule BurgasBuni
Hisar, Battle of, 1912; Ottoman Empire in the
Balkan Wars

Further Reading
Pasa, Abdullah. 1328 Balkan Harbinde Sark
Ordusu Kumandan Abdullah Pasann Balkan Harbi Hatrat. Edited by Tahsin Yl zturkcu. Istanbul: Dun
drm and Ibrahim O
Bugun Yarn Yaynlar, 2012.
Pas a, Mahmud Muhtar Pas a. Balkan Harbi
cuncu Kolordunun ve Ikinci Dogu OrduU
sunun Muharebeleri. Edited by A. Basad
Kocaoglu. Istanbul: Ilgi Kultur Sanat, 2012.
Pasa, Mahmud Muhtar. Ac Bir Hatra: 1328
Balkan Harbinde Sark Ordusu Kumandan
Mahmoud Moukhtar Pasha [Mahmut Muhtar Pasha, Mon commandenment au cours
de la Campgne des Balkans de 1912].
Paris and Nancy: Berger-Levrault, 1913.

Marasesti, Battle of, 1917


The battle of Ma ra s es ti was fought from
August 6 to September 3, 1917, between
the invading Austro-Hungarian and German
forces and the Romanian and Russian
armies in northeastern Romania. This was
the largest of three important battles on the
Romanian front in the late summer and
early fall of 1917.
An offensive by the newly reorganized
Romanian army preceded this battle. This
offensive was undertaken by the Romanian
Second Army commanded by General
Alexandru Averescu (18591938) and the
Russian Fourth Army on July 24, 1917.
Here, despite heavy losses, the Romanian
army initially defeated the invaders. The

spread of revolutionary ideas in Russian


army units stationed elsewhere on the front
caused the offensive to halt prematurely on
July 29.
Seeking to gain the initiative and hoping to
knock Romania out of the war, the AustroHungarians and Germans launched an offensive against the Romanian First Army commanded by General Eremea Grigorescu
(18631919) and some Russian units at Marasesti beginning on August 6. The fighting
continued until September 3. The Romanians
again sustained high casualties but held
their positions. At the same time, another
Austro-HungarianGerman offensive began
against the Romanian Second Army at
Oituz. Here, too, the Romanians withstood
the invaders attacks but at a high cost.
The three battles demonstrated that the
Romanian army had overcome many of its
weaknesses that had caused the overwhelming defeats of the previous year. The defensive victories at Ma ra s es ti and Oituz in
particular enabled the Romanian government in Iasi to continue the war for another
six months. Unfortunately, the collapse of
Russia early the next year negated the 1917
victories and made further prosecution of
the war impossible. Romania left the war
on March 5, 1918, with the Preliminary
Treaty of Buftea. Romania then returned to
the war on the side of the victors on November 9, 1918.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Averescu, Alexandru (18591938);
Romania in World War I

Further Reading
Hitchins, Keith. Rumania, 18661947.
Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1994.
Torrey, Glenn. The Romanian Battlefront in
World War I. Lawrence: University Press
of Kansas, 2011.

Mehmet Ali
Treptow, Kurt W., ed. A History of Romania.
Iasi: Center for Romanian Studies, 1996.

Mehmet Ali (17691849)


Mehmet (also Mohammed) Ali was an
Albanian officer of the Ottoman army
who declared himself leader of Egypt and
became regarded as the founder of modern
Egypt. Mehmet Ali was born in Kavala in
Macedonia to Albanian parents on March 4,
1769. In 1801, he became a commander in
Albanian unit with the army that the Ottoman
sultan, Selim III, sent to reoccupy Egypt after
the French departure. Mehmet took advantage
of the conflict between the sultan and
the Mamluks, the rulers of Egypt for over
600 years, and elevated himself to the position
of governor of Egypt by 1805. On March 1,
1811, he had the Mamluk leaders murdered
in Cairo and, soon afterward, had the remaining Mamluks killed.
Mehmet soon established Egypt as a
regional power. To secure regular revenue,
he nationalized all the land in Egypt and
required all producers to sell their goods to
the state, which, in turn, resold the goods
and kept the surplus. He supported the cultivation of long staple cotton, which increased
state revenues and wages for many farmers.
Mehmet Ali established factories to
produce weapons and a shipyard to construct a navy. In the 1820s, he sent promising Egyptians to Europe to study European
languages, especially French, and established hospitals and schools in Egypt. The
students of these schools studied French
texts, on topics ranging from sociology and
history to military technology, and translated
them into Arabic. In 1835, his government
founded the first indigenous press in the
Arab world.

Mehmet kept all central authority for


himself and installed his sons in most key
positions. He divided Egypt into 10 provinces responsible for collecting taxes and
maintaining order and established a professional bureaucracy, a byproduct of his training program. Mehmet created a modern
army, which he first used to assist the
Ottoman sultan, Mahmud II (17891839),
with his conflicts in Arabia and Greece. In
1812, Mehmets forces defeated the Saudis
and secured most of Arabia for the sultan. In
1820, Mehmet Ali invaded the Sudan and
conquered that territory the following year.
In 1827, he provided a navy and an army to
help Mahmud put down the revolt in Greece,
but a combined European navy destroyed
the Egyptian fleet at Navarino, forcing
Mehmet to withdraw his army.
After the defeat at Navarino, Mehmet
rebuilt his navy and raised a new army. On
October 31, 1831, he invaded Syria, captured Acre on May 27, 1832, and soundly
defeated the Ottoman army at the battle of
Konya in south-central Anatolia on December 21, 1832. To prevent the complete collapse of the Ottoman Empire, the European
powers brokered the Convention of Kutahya
in May 1833, which would grant Crete and
the Hejaz to Mehmet if he withdrew his
forces from Anatolia. However, Mehmet
rejected the convention because it did not
establish an independent Egypt with him as
its ruler.
In mid-1839, Mehmet renewed the war
against the Ottoman Empire. On June 24,
1839, at the battle of Nezib, his forces again
soundly defeated the Ottoman army. Soon
afterward, the Ottoman fleet defected to
Mehmet Ali. Sultan Mahmud II died almost
immediately after the battle, and his 16-year
old son, Abdul Mecid (18231861), succeeded him. The European powers again

185

186

Metaxas, Ioannis

intervened and, in the Convention of London


of 1840, offered Mehmet Ali hereditary rule
of Egypt within the Ottoman Empire if he
withdrew his forces from Syrian territory. In
the face of European military might, Mehmet
agreed to the Conventions terms on November 27, 1840.
After 1843, Mehmet Alis mind became
increasingly clouded. In 1846, he traveled
to Constantinople, made peace with the
sultan, and secured hereditary rule of Egypt
for his family. He personally ruled Egypt
until 1848, when senility made further personal governance impossible. Mehmet Ali
died in Alexandria on August 2, 1849. His
dynasty ruled Egypt and Sudan, in actuality
or officially, until the revolution of 1952.
Robert B. Kane
See also: Greek War of Independence, 1821
1832; Mahmud II (17851839); Navarino,
Battle of, 1827

Further Reading
Goldschmidt, Arthur, Jr. Modern Egypt: The
Formation of a Nation-State. Boulder, CO:
Westview Press, 1988.
Shaw, Stanford J., and Exel Kural Shaw.
History of the Ottoman Empire and Modern
Turkey. 2 vols. Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 19761977.
Vatikiotis, P. J. The History of Modern
Egypt from Muhammad Ali to Mubarak.
Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University
Press, 1991.
Warburg, Gabriel R. Egypt and the Sudan
Studies in History and Politics. London: F.
Cass, 1985.

Metaxas, Ioannis (18711941)


Ioannis Metaxas was a Greek army general
and dictator of Greece from 1936. Born on
the island of Ithaca on April 12, 1871, Metaxas was commissioned in the army on

graduation from the Greek Military Academy in 1890. Following service in the 1897
Greco-Ottoman War, he studied in Berlin.
Metaxas served on the Greek General Staff
during the 19121913 Balkan Wars. He
became army chief of staff in 1913.
At the beginning of World War I, Metaxas
favored an alliance with the Central Powers.
A staunch monarchist and opponent of Eleutherios Venizelos (18641936), he left Greece
following the forced abdication of King Constantine (18681923) in 1917 and returned
with the king three years later. Metaxas
entered the Greek Parliament in 1926, and in
1936, he seized power and became dictator,
with the justification of preventing a Communist takeover. During his authoritarian rule,
the Greeks successfully repelled the Italian
invasion that began in October 1940 and
indeed went on the offensive the next month,
occupying much of Albania. Metaxas died
on January 29, 1941, before Germany intervened in Greece.
Spencer C. Tucker
See also: Constantine I, King of Greece
(18681923); National Schism (Greece),
19161917, Venize los, Eleuthe rios (1864
1936)

Further Reading
Higham, Robin D. S. The Metaxas Dictatorship: Aspects of Greece, 19361940.
Athens: Hellenic Foundation for Defense
and Foreign Policy, 1993.
MacKenzie, Compton. Wind of Freedom: The
History of the Invasion of Greece by the
Axis Powers, 19401941. London: Chatto
and Windus, 1943.
Papagos, Alexandros. The Battle of Greece,
19401941. Athens: J. M. Slazikis Alpha
Editions, 1949.
Vatikiotis, P. J. Popular Autocracy in Greece,
193641: A Political Biography of General
Ioannis Metaxas. London: Cass, 1998.

Mihailov, Ivan

Michael I, King of Romania


(1921)
Michael I was king of Romania (19271930,
19401947) and pretender to the throne after
1947. Born in the royal castle at Sinaia on
October 25, 1921, to Romanias Crown
Prince Carol (18931953) and Princess
Helen of Greece (18961982), Michael succeeded his grandfather Ferdinand I (1865
1927) as king in 1927, bypassing his father,
who had renounced his claim to the throne
in 1925 in order to pursue a liaison with the
socialite Magda Lupescu (18951977).
This brief regency ended in 1930 with the
return of his father, who engineered his
own accession as Carol II, pursuing selfindulgent policies and political gestures and
ultimately creating a royal dictatorship in
1938 meant to counter the growing influence
of defense minister Ion Antonescu (1882
1946) and the fascist Iron Guard. After the
Soviet Unions occupation of Bessarabia
and the ceding of Transylvania to Hungary,
in September 1940, Carol was obliged to
abdicate in favor of Michael, then 19 years
old. It was Antonescu, however, who held
real power in Romania.
Michael and Helen, now effectively wards
of the state, spent most of the war years at
Sinaia, visiting the capital only for command
figurehead appearances with Antonescu. On
August 23, 1944, with the Soviets poised for
invasion of Romania, Michael and a sympathetic military element managed a coup that
deposed Antonescu and a number of ministers, who soon were turned over to the
Soviets. In September 1944, Michael traveled
to Moscow to sign an armistice with the
Allies, ending the war for Romania and paving the way for the Romanian Communists
to fully emerge and claim power. By force of
will, Michael maintained a presence in

Romania until he was pressured to abdicate


and sent into exile in December 1947. He
made his home in Switzerland, working with
an American brokerage firm and acting as a
goodwill ambassador on behalf of Romania
after the fall of the regime of Nicolae Ceausescu (19181989).
Gordon E. Hogg
See also: Antonescu, Ion (18821946); Carol
II, King of Romania (18931953); Romania in
World War II; Romanian Coup, August 1944

Further Reading
Hindley, Geoffrey. The Royal Families of
Europe. New York: Carroll and Graf, 2000.
Hitchins, Keith. Rumania, 18661947.
Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1994.
Treptow, Kurt W., ed. A History of Romania.
Iasi: Center for Romanian Studies, 1996.

Mihailov, Ivan (18961990)


The Macedonian revolutionary leader Ivan
Mihailov, sometimes known as Vancho, was
born in Macedonia during Ottoman rule near
Shtip on August 26, 1896. His family supported the Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization (IMRO; VMRO).
After studying law in Sofia, he joined the
organization. He became an aide to VMRO
leader Todor Aleksandrov (18811924).
After Aleksandrovs assassination on
August 31, 1924, by elements in the Bulgarian military who opposed VMRO, Mihailov
assumed control of the organization. Mihailov
initiated a ruthless terror campaign in
Bulgaria and elsewhere in Europe in pursuit
of his goal of an independent Macedonia.
Under him, the Petrich region of southwestern
Bulgaria became virtually autonomous. From
this base, VRMO launched raids into Greece
and Yugoslavia.

187

188

Mihajlovic, Dragoljub Draza

In an effort to end this situation, Zveno


(Link), an organization of Bulgarian military officers, seized power in Sofia on
May 19, 1934, and undertook a campaign
to cleanse the Petrich region of VMRO.
Mihailov fled to Turkey, and later to Italy.
Before World War II, VMRO received support from Mussolinis Italy. During the war,
Mihailov moved to Zagreb in independent
Croatia. There he established contact with
the Germans. He declined a German offer
in August 1944 to establish an independent
Macedonia, recognizing that the Germans
had by then lost the war.
After the war, Mihailov settled in Italy.
He remained the leader of VMRO, the
largely forgotten leader of a largely forgotten organization. Mihailov died in Rome on
September 5, 1990. Ironically, a little over
a year after his death, Macedonia achieved
independence and VMRO revived as a
political movement.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Italy in the Balkans during World
War II; Military League (Bulgaria); VMRO

Further Reading
Crampton, R. J. Bulgaria. Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 2007.
Mihailov, Ivan. Spomeni. 4 vols. Brussels:
Macedonian Cultural Fellowship, 1958
1973.
Tomasevich, Jozo. War and Revolution in
Yugoslavia, 19411945. Stanford, CA:
Stanford University Press, 2001.

Mihajlovic, Dragoljub Draza


(18931946)
Yugoslav army officer and guerrilla leader,
born at Ivanjica, Serbia, in 1893, Dragoljub
Mihajlovic , nicknamed Draz a, entered
the military academy in Belgrade in 1908

but interrupted his studies to serve with distinction in the 19121913 Balkan Wars and
World War I. Mihajlovic rose to the rank of
colonel and was, for a time, inspector general of fortifications. When the Germans
invaded Yugoslavia in April 1941, he organized resistance to the Axis occupation forces
in the mountains of western Serbia.
etniks (Chetniks), named
Mihajlovics C
after the Serbian guerrillas who had fought
the Turks) were mostly pro-monarchist
Serbs. Mihajlovic was promoted to general
in December 1941, and in June 1942, he
became minister of war in King Peter IIs
Yugoslav government-in-exile.
Already reluctant to pursue a vigorous
campaign against the Axis occupation forces
lest he provoke reprisals against Yugoslav
civilians, Mihajlovic correctly understood that a rival resistance group, the proCommunist Partisans led by Josip Broz Tito
(18921980), posed a greater threat to the
restoration of a Serb-dominated monarchy
than did the Axis powers, especially as Tito
and most of his followers were Croats, the
Serbs traditional rivals for power. Accordingly, Mihajlovic and Tito focused on fighting
each other rather than the Germans and Italians, with whom they both also collaborated
when it suited their purposes.
At first, the Cetniks enjoyed Allied support, but Mihajlovic was systematically discredited by Communist sympathizers
among the British. Pressured by Soviet
leader Josef Stalin at Tehran, the Allies
agreed to shift their support to Tito. In
December 1943, the British halted all aid to
etniks, and in May 1944, King Peter
the C
formed a new government and named Tito
as minister of war.
etniks
Abandoned by the Allies, the C
were soon overpowered, and Mihajlovic
went into hiding. He was captured by the
Communists on March 13, 1946, tried for

Military League (Bulgaria)

collaboration with the Axis powers, and,


despite protests by Western governments,
executed in Belgrade on July 17, 1946. In
March 1948, U.S. president Harry S. Truman (18841972) secretly awarded Mihajlovic the Legion of Merit for rescuing some
500 Allied airmen and for his role in helping
to defeat the Axis powers.
Charles R. Shrader
See also: Cetniks; Partisans, Yugoslavia; Tito,
Josip Broz (18921980); Yugoslavia in World
War II

Further Reading
Karchmar, Lucien. Draza Mihailovic and the
Rise of the Cetnik Movement, 19411942.
New York: Garland Publishing, 1988.
Lees, Michael. The Rape of Serbia: The British
Role in Titos Grab for Power, 19431944.
New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich,
1991.
Martin, David. Patriot or Traitor: The Case of
General Mikailovich. Palo Alto, CA: Hoover Institution Press, 1978.
Roberts, W. Tito, Mihailovic, and the Allies,
19411944. 2nd ed. Durham, NC: Duke
University Press, 1987.
Tomashevich, Jozo. The Chetniks: War and
Revolution in Yugoslavia, 19411945. Palo
Alto, CA: Stanford University Press, 2001.

Military League (Bulgaria)


The Military League was a secret organization founded by active and reserve Bulgarian military officers in the aftermath of
Bulgarias defeat in World War I in 1919.
They were determined to maintain Bulgarias nationalist objectives and evade the
limitations imposed on the Bulgarian army
by the 1919 Treaty of Neuilly.
Although banned by the government of
Aleksandur Stamboliski (18791923), the

Military League received support from


Czar Boris III (18941943). Members of
the league participated in the June 1923
coup that overthrew Stamboliski. They also
helped to suppress the September 1923
Communist uprising. Although they supported the post-Stamboliski government of
Alexandu r Tsankov (18791958), by the
mid-1920s, the Military League had begun
to fade. Many of its members became supporters of the Zveno (Link) movement in
the 1930s, which seized power in Sofia in
1934.
Zveno was a nonparty elitist organization
that acted as a counterweight to IMRO
(VMRO), the Macedonian revolutionary
party. Having taken power, Zveno disbanded
as a formal organization. After Czar Boris
ousted the Zveno regime and established
his own mild authoritarian regime the next
year, many member of Zveno drifted into
opposition. During World War II, some of
them established loose cooperation with the
Communist-led Fatherland Front. Although
Zveno members supported the Fatherland
Fronts takeover of September 9, 1944, they
had little impact on the Fatherland Front
itself. Zveno then disbanded in 1949. After
the fall of the Communist regime in 1989,
the movement revived.
The Military League and its successor
Zveno represented an effort in Bulgarian
politics to establish a nationalist and
democratic alternative to the Macedonian
and the other right-wing organizations.
Because they tended to be elitist, they
never succeeded in having a significant
impact on the largely egalitarian Bulgarian
political scene.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Boris III, Czar of Bulgaria (1894
1943); Stamboliski, Aleksandur (18791923);
VMRO

189

190

Milosevic, Slobodan

Further Reading
Bell, John D. Peasants in Power: Alexander
Stamboliski and the Bulgarian Agrarian
Union, 18991923: Princeton: Princeton
University Press, 1977.
Crampton, R. J. Bulgaria. Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 2007.
Groueff, Stephane. Crown of Thorns: The
Reign of King Boris III of Bulgaria 1918
1943. Latham, MD: Madison Books, 1987.

Milosevic, Slobodan (19412006)


Slobodan Milos evic was the president of
Yugoslavia from July 1997 to October 2000.
A Serbian nationalist, he was a controversial
figure whose policies were central in the
breakup of that country into independent
states during the Yugoslav Civil War.
Following his military actions in the autonomous Serbian province of Kosovo, Milosevic became the first serving head of state
to be indicted for crimes against humanity.
Milos evic was born to Montenegrin
parents on August 20, 1941, in Pozaverac,
Serbia. He was educated at Belgrade University and, after receiving his law degree in
1964, entered into business administration,
ultimately becoming president of a Belgrade
bank. A longtime Communist (he had joined
the Communist Party of Yugoslavia at the
age of 18), Milosevic became the leader of
the Belgrade Communist Party in 1984, and
in 1987, he took over as Serbian Communist
Party leader.
Following a 1987 incident in Kosovo,
Milos evic carefully nurtured the antiAlbanian sentiments of both Serbs and
Montenegrins and orchestrated a long series
of pro-Serbian demonstrations starting in
July 1988. He was determined to revoke the
autonomous status of both Kosovo and Vojvodina provincesdesignations that had been

supported by former Yugoslav leader Josip


Broz Tito (18921980) as a counterbalance
to Serbian nationalism. In March 1989, both
provinces ceded most of their autonomy to
Serbia after many months of fierce street
demonstrations by Milosevics supporters.
Milos evic won the Serbian presidency on
May 8, 1989, and proceeded to further reduce
the autonomy given to the provinces by making changes within the Serbian constitution.
In 1991, Slovenia, Croatia, and Macedonia seceded from Yugoslavia. Milos evic
sent the Yugoslav army to reclaim the territories and supported ethnic Serb, Croat, and
Slovene paramilitary groups in an attempt
to reassert Serbian dominion over the
region. When Bosnia and Herzegovina also
seceded, Milosevic-supported Bosnian Serb
forces besieged the Bosnian capital, Sarajevo, for three years and instituted a brutal
campaign of ethnic cleansing that culminated in 1995 with the deaths of more than
7,000 Muslim boys and men in the
UN-protected safe haven of Srebrenica.
Throughout 1991 and 1992, Milos evic
resisted all attempts by various European
nations, the United States, and the United
Nations to negotiate peace for the federation. He also continued to thwart any efforts
to democratize the Serbian government. In
late 1994, he gave into international pressure
and ordered the cutoff of military aid to the
Bosnian Serb forces, also agreeing to permit
international monitors to be deployed along
the Serbian border with Bosnia and Herzegovina. In exchange, the UN agreed to ease
international sanctions against Yugoslavia.
A year later, Milos evic met with leaders
from Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina
to endorse the Dayton Agreement, bringing
an end to the long-running war.
In July 1997, Yugoslavias Federal
Assembly elected Milos evic as the new
Yugoslav president, succeeding Zoran Lilic

Milosevic, Slobodan

(1953). Milos evic pursued the federal


office because he was banned by the Serbian
constitution from serving a third term as
Serbian president. Although the federal
president has traditionally held a ceremonial
role in the government, Milosevic retained
much of his political power due to his position as leader of Serbias dominant Socialist
Party.
Milos evics role as Balkan peacemaker
ended in March 1999, when he instigated
another war for the expansion of Serbian
nationalism, implementing a policy of
forced removal on the majority Albanian
population in Kosovo province. His ethnic
cleansing campaign in Kosovo resulted in
the deaths of nearly half of the Albanian
Kosovar population. Milosevics refusal to
accept an internationally brokered peace
plan resulted in a three-month North
Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)led
bombing campaign of Yugoslavia and an
indictment on crimes against humanity for
the Yugoslav president.
After the NATO bombing campaign,
dissentersheavily censored under Milosevics presidencygained confidence, and
protests erupted criticizing his autocratic
rule. Opposition parties demanded his resignation, and in light of his waning popularity,
Milosevic attempted to solidify his power by
calling for an early presidential election. His
plan backfired when challenger Vojislav
Kostunica (1944) won the poll, but
Milosevic refused to give up the presidency.
Through the Constitutional Court, he
attempted to void the results, making a second
round of balloting necessary. His actions set
off massive public protests, which included
the burning of the parliament building, and
on October 6, 2000, Milosevic stepped down
as a result of the popular uprising.
In April 2001, Milos evic was arrested
by Yugoslav police and charged with

A defiant former Yugoslav president Slobodan


Milosevic appears before the United Nations
(UN) War Crimes Tribunal on August 30,
2001. In the early- to mid-1980s, Milos evic
waged an aggressive war of conquest and
genocide in Bosnia. In 2002, Milosevic was
tried by the World Court for war crimes
committed during the Yugoslavian Civil War.
He died of a heart attack in his cell at the UN
International Criminal Tribunal for the
Former Yugoslavia in The Hague, the
Netherlands, on March 11, 2006. (AP Photo/
Peter Dejong)

embezzlement, abuse of power, and obstruction of justice. Two months later, the UN
International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia sent him to The Hague to
face charges of genocide, war crimes, and
crimes against humanity. By December 2001, he was formally indicted on 29
violations of international law. His trial
began on September 26, 2002, and continued for four years, during which time the
trial was riddled with controversy and
repeatedly interrupted by Milos evic s ill

191

192

Mladic, Ratko

health. During the trial, Milosevic served as


his own lawyer (until he was deemed medically unfit) and often defended his actions
by portraying himself and his country as
victims.
Milosevic died in his cell at The Hague on
March 11, 2006. Medical tests revealed that
the cause of death was a heart attack, though
Milosevics family accused the tribunal of
poisoning the former leader, who in recent
years had been plagued by heart and bloodpressure ailments. Two months after his
death, in May 2006, the tribunal concluded
its investigation into the cause of death and
formally determined: Nothing has been
found to support allegations reported in
some sections of the media that Milosevic
had been murdered, in particular by poisoning. The results of an independent investigation by the Dutch authorities demonstrate
that such allegations are entirely false.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Yugoslav Wars, 19911995; Yugoslav Wars, 19911995, Causes; Yugoslav
Wars, 19911995, Consequences

Further Reading
Curtis, Glenn E., ed. Yugoslavia: A Country
Study. 3rd ed. Washington, DC: Federal
Research Division, Library of Congress,
1992.
Magas, Branka. The Destruction of Yugoslavia: Tracking the Breakup 19801992.
New York: Verso, 1993.
Sell, Louis. Slobodan Milosevic and the
Destruction of Yugoslavia, Durham, NC:
Duke University Press, 2002.

Mladic, Ratko (1943)


Ratko Mladic served as commander in chief
of the army of the Republika Srbska during
the 19921995 war in Bosnia, and was

accused of war crimes in his conduct of


that war as commander of Bosnian Serb
forces.
Mladic was born in Bosnia-Herzegovina
on March 12, 1943, during World War II.
His father was killed by the Croatian Ustasa
during the war. Mladic attended a military
high school and then an army military academy. Entering the Yugoslav Peoples Army
(JNA) as a career officer, he served as an
infantry commander. On the outbreak of
the conflict in Croatia in 1991, while holding the rank of colonel, he was appointed to
command the Ninth Corps of the JNA in
Knin. He was promoted to general-major
due to his successes during the war in Croatia, where he established a reputation as
an aggressive and capable field commander.
When the Republika Srbska declared its
independence from Bosnia-Herzegovina in
April 1992, Mladic was appointed the commander in chief of the republics mixed
army of local militias and former JNA
units. He aggressively pursued the war, and
was later charged with encouraging and
facilitating brutal conduct toward enemy
civilianssuch as shelling the city of
Sarajevoand the use of UN peacekeepers
as human shields to prevent NATO air
strikes.
Of the war crimes attributed to Mladic,
the most publicized was the fall of Srebrenica, which he personally commanded. The
city (along with five others) was declared a
safe haven for Bosnian Muslims by the
United Nations in 1993, protected by a
small force of UN peacekeepers. Bosnian
Serbs protested (with some justification)
that the safe havens were used as bases by
Bosnian Muslim forces. Over June to
July 1995, Srebrenica was overrunthe
UN peacekeeping unit failing to prevent the
takeoverand some 40,000 Bosnian
Muslims were forced to evacuate the city.

Montenegro in Balkan Events, 18761878

Bosnian Serb forces reportedly executed


many Muslim men (including 12-year-old
boys) after the city was taken, despite promises of safe passage. Although the number
killed is disputed, the charges stated it was
in the range of 8,000.
He was indicted by the International
Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY) of The Hague on July 24,
1995, along with former Republika Srbska
president Radovan Karadz ic on multiple
counts. These include charges of genocide,
crimes against humanity, and crimes against
civilians, destruction and seizure of property, the use of UN peacekeepers as hostages
and the conduct of the siege of Sarajevo.
Additional counts were issued that November regarding events at Srebrenica. In
June 1996, warrants were issued by the
ICTY for the arrest of both men, and Mladic
was then replaced as commander of the
Republika Srbskas army.
Mladic remained at large for the next
16 years. He probably spent most of this
time in Serbia. On May 26, 2011, Serbian
authorities arrested him in Lazeravo, Vojvodina, Serbia. This was probably in connection with Serbias attempt to join the
European Union. He subsequently was
extradited to The Hague, Netherlands,
where as of this writing, he awaited trial on
charges of war crimes.
James W. Frusetta
See also: Bosnian War, 19921995; Dayton
Peace Accords, 1995; Srebrinica Massacre,
1995; Yugoslav Wars, 19911995; Yugoslav
Wars, 19911995, Causes; Yugoslav Wars,
19911995, Consequences

Further Reading
Cigar, Norman L. Genocide in Bosnia: The
Policy of Ethnic Cleansing. College Station:
Texas A&M University Press, 1995.

Fogelquist, Alan F. Handbook of Facts on: The


Break-Up of Yugoslavia International Policy and the War in Bosnia-Herzegovina.
Whitmore Lake, MI: AEIOU Publishing,
1993.
Magas, Branka. The Destruction of Yugoslavia: Tracking the Breakup 19801992.
New York: Verso, 1993.
Silber, Laura, and Allan Little. Yugoslavia,
Death of a Nation. New York: TV Books,
1996.

Montenegro in Balkan Events,


18761878
Montenegro played an important role in the
turbulent years of 18761878, which led to
the loss of Ottoman power in much of the
Balkan Peninsula. Prince Nikola (1841
1921) took advantage of local unrest in Herzegovina in 1875 to intervene there against
Ottoman rule. Initially he gave shelter and
support to Herzegovinian rebels. He also
sanctioned the attacks of Montenegrin irregulars into Herzegovina. With the expectation
of acquiring all Herzegovina, Nikola
increased Montenegrin activities.
On June 16, 1876, Nikola signed an alliance agreement with Prince Milan (1854
1901) of Serbia. Two weeks later, Montenegrin and Serbian armies attacked separately into Ottoman territory. Montenegrin
forces initially achieved some success
against the Ottomans. In September 1877,
after a prolonged siege, they took the important town of Niks ic . They also occupied
several locations on the Adriatic coast,
including Bar, Spic, and Ulcinj.
The Russian victory over the Ottomans in
the Russo-Ottoman War of 18771878 confirmed the Montenegrin successes. While
the Treaty of Berlin somewhat reduced the
territories awarded to Montenegro by the

193

194

Montenegro in the Balkan Wars

previous Treaty of San Stefano, it still


doubled the size of the small Balkan state.
In addition to Niksic and the Adriatic coast,
Montenegro also acquired the important
town of Podgorica. Nevertheless, many
Montenegrins, including Prince Nikola,
were disappointed by the outcome. They
had hoped to gain all of Herzegovina.
Regardless, the performance of the
Montenegrin army in the fighting against
the Ottomans proved to be better than that
of their Serbian allies. In the aftermath of
the Treaty of Berlin, the international position of Montenegro was enhanced. Prince
Nikola could even dream of uniting all of
the Serbian people under the House of
Petrovic-Njegos.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Berlin, Treaty of, 1878; Nikola I,
King of Montenegro (18411921); RussoOttoman War, 18771878

Further Reading
MacKenzie, David. The Serbs and Russian
Pan-Slavism 18751878. Ithaca, NY:
Cornell University Press, 1967.
Roberts, Elizabeth. Realm of the Balkan
Mountain: A History of Montenegro. Ithaca,
NY: Cornell University Press, 2007.
Stevenson, Francis Seymour. A History of
Montenegro. New York: Arno, 1971.

Montenegro in the Balkan Wars


The First Balkan War, 19121913, represented a time of hope and frustration for
the tiny Balkan kingdom of Montenegro.
Before the war began, Montenegro, under
King Nikola (18411921) had great expectations of acquiring Ottoman territory in
northern Albania and in the sanjak of Novi
Pazar. Because of his pan-Serb ambitions,
King Nikola especially wanted to take a

medieval Serbian capital, Prizren in Kosovo,


and Scutari (Shkoder, Skadar), the largest
town in northern Albania.
Unfortunately, Montenegro lacked the
military power to realize these aims. Its
army was little more than a mass militia
consisting of most of the males of military
age in the kingdom. It had only a few
modern artillery pieces and a small cavalry
unit. Due to the chronic instability of the
Ottoman border regions, many Montenegrin
soldiers had combat experience, but this
tended to season them as individuals rather
than as an army. During the summer of
1912 Montenegro signed agreements for
military cooperation with Bulgaria and
Serbia.
Montenegro opened the war against the
Ottoman Empire on October 8, with King
Nikolas youngest son, Prince Petar (1889
1932), firing the first shot across the Ottoman frontier. The Montenegrins advanced
along three axes. Their Eastern Division,
consisting of 12,000 men, proceeded into
the sanjak of Novi Pazar. The Zeta Division
of 15,000 men moved along the eastern
shore of Lake Scutari towards the city
of Scutari. The Coastal Division, with
8,000 men, pressed along the western shore
of the lake to the city. These two forces
were unable to meet south of the city due
to the strength of Ottoman fortified positions
there. Scutari resisted Montenegrin efforts to
seize it. Simplistic Montenegrin tactics
caused heavy casualties among the attackers. By the time of the December 3 armistice
between the Balkan allies and the Ottomans,
the situation around Scutari had stalemated.
The Montenegrins lacked the strength to
break into Scutari; the Ottomans lacked the
strength to break the siege.
The armistice ended on January 30, 1913.
On February 7, the two Montenegrin divisions attempted a coordinated assault on

Montenegro in World War I

Scutari; it failed. Later that month, the Serbs


sent 30,000 troops to assist the Montenegrins. By this time, Austria-Hungary and
Italy had prevailed upon the other Great
Powers to include Scutari in the new
Albanian state. Another MontenegrinSerbian assault on Scutari failed on
March 31. Soon afterward, the Serbs, under
Austro-Hungarian pressure, withdrew their
forces. On April 2, a Great Power fleet
appeared off the Montenegrin coast to
impose its decision that Scutari should go
to Albania. The Montenegrins succeeded in
persuading the exhausted defenders to surrender on April 22. Great Power pressure
forced Montenegrin troops to abandon Scutari less than two weeks later, on April 5.
This ended the First Balkan War for Montenegro. During the brief Second Balkan War,
a Montenegrin unit fought alongside the
Serbs against Bulgaria in Macedonia.
Despite the poor performance of its army,
Montenegro gained half of the sanjak of
Novi Pazar and a portion of Kosovo as a
result of the Balkan Wars. These gains
came at the cost of around 3,000 dead and
7,000 wounded. Another casualty of the
Balkan Wars was the power and prestige of
King Nikola. The failure of his armies
around Scutari demonstrated the fundamental weakness of his rule. The relative success
of the Serbian army made unification with
Serbia appear to be an attractive alternative
to an independent Montenegro.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Balkan League, 1912; Balkan War,
First, 19121913; Balkan War, Second, 1913;
Balkan Wars, 19121913, Causes; Balkan
Wars, 19121913, Consequences; Scutari,
Siege of, 19121913

Further Reading
Djuris ic , Mitar. Operations of the Montenegrin Army during the First Balkan War.

In East Central Europe and the Balkan


Wars, edited by Bela K. Kiraly and Dimitrije Djordjevic, 12040. Boulder, CO:
Social Science Monographs, 1987.
Hall, Richard C. The Balkan Wars, 1912
1913: Prelude to the First World War. London: Routledge, 2000.
Jowett, Philip S. Armies of the Balkan Wars,
19121913. Oxford: Osprey, 2011.
Roberts, Elizabeth. Realm of the Black Mountain: A History of Montenegro. Ithaca, NY:
Cornell University Press, 2007.

Montenegro in World War I


The only Allied state to lose its independence in World War I, the small Balkan principality of Montenegro (Latinized form of
the Serbo-Croat words Crna Gora, which
means Black Mountain) gained its
independence from the Ottoman Empire
and doubled its territory as a result of the
Treaty of Berlin (July 13, 1878) following
the successful 18761877 war against the
Turks. Led by Nikola I Petrovic -Njegos
(prince during 18601910 and king during
19101918), Montenegro was modernized
in the late nineteenth century and became a
small but viable European state. In 1905,
Nikola I granted a constitutional government with an elected National Assembly.
He subsequently led Montenegro in the
Balkan Wars of 19121913 in which Montenegro again doubled its territory but failed to
realize all of its territorial ambitions.
With the outbreak of World War I, Nikola
I supported his son-in-law, King Peter I
Karageorgevic of Serbia, and tiny Montenegro declared war on Austria-Hungary on
August 5, 1914. With a population of just
over 436,000 people, Montenegro mobilized
some 60,000 troops, who were placed under
the command of the Serbian major general
Boz idar Jankovic (18491920). General

195

196

Montenegro in World War I

Jankovic deployed the bulk of the Montenegrin army toward Bosnia-Herzegovina


and the remainder toward Albania.
The Austro-Hungarian XVI Corps of the
Sixth Army invaded Montenegro on October 9, 1914, but the small Montenegrin
army, modernized by Nikola I in 1906,
fought bravely and repelled the initial Austrian attack. The Montenegrins later covered
the retreat of the Serbian army through
Albania in NovemberDecember 1915 by
engaging the Austrians in eastern Herzegovina and the sanjak, winning an important
victory at Mojkovac on January 67, 1916.
Following the Serbian withdrawal, the
Montenegrin army fought on against the
Central Powers. On January 8, 1916,
50,000 Austrian and Bosnian troops began
an offensive against Montenegro, took
Mount Lovcen, and forced the Montenegrins
back on their capital of Cetinje, which fell
on January 11, 1916. On January 17, the
Montenegrin army was forced to surrender
to Austro-Hungarian forces after having suffered heavy casualties. King Nikola I went
into exile in Italy, and some Montenegrin
troops escaped to Corfu where they joined
the survivors of the Serbian retreat and subsequently served with the Yugoslav Division
of the Serbian army on the Salonika Front
during 19171918.
King Nikola had long clashed with the
Greater Serbia ambitions of his son-in-law,

King Peter I Karageorgevic (18441921),


and Serbian prime minister Nicola Pas ic
(18451926). Following the surrender of the
Montenegrin army in January 1916, King
Nikola compromised his own position by
seeking a separate peace with the Central
Powers. On October 23, 1918, the Serbian
Second Army occupied Montenegro, and on
November 26, 1918, King Nikola I was
deposed by the Montenegrin National
Assembly meeting in Podgorica. Serbia then
annexed Montenegro. It became the province
of Zeta in the new South Slav Kingdom of
the Slovenes, Croats, and Serbs. An unsuccessful uprising of Montenegrin patriots led
by Colonel Krsto Popovic (18811927)
began in January 1919 and lasted until 1926.
Charles R. Shrader
See also: Austria-Hungary in the Balkans
during World War I; Nikola I, King of Montenegro (18411921)

Further Reading
Roberts, Elizabeth. Realm of the Black Mountain: A History of Montenegro. Ithaca, NY:
Cornell University Press, 2007.
Thomas, Nigel, and Dusan Babac. Armies in
the Balkans, 191418. Oxford: Osprey,
2001.
Treadway, John D. The Falcon and the Eagle:
Montenegro and Austria-Hungary, 1908
1914. West Lafayette, IN: Purdue University Press, 1983, 1998.

N
National Schism (Greece),
19161917

occupation of eastern Macedonia in


May 1916 produced more public outrage
against the king. In August, a secret proVenizelist military organization with
Entente support established a provisional
state in Thessaloniki. Toward the end of
1916, France and Britain officially recognized Venize loss state as the legal
government of Greece.
In November 1916, royalists, led by Colonel
Ioannis Metaxas (18711941), a close aide to
Constantine, terrorized Venizelist sympathizers
in and around Athens. These attacks led to an
armed confrontation between the royalists and
French marines. In retaliation, the Venizelos
government and the Entente established a
naval blockade, seized the Greek navy and
demanded the partial disarmament of the
royalist forces. After a 106-day blockade, an
Entente threat to bombard Athens, and intense
negotiations, Constantine left Greece, and his
second son Alexander became king.
On May 29, 1917, Venizelos returned to
Athens, and a unified Greece declared war
on the Central Powers in July. Ten Greek
divisions fought valiantly with the Entente
forces along the Macedonian Front and
pushed the German and Bulgarian forces
northward by late September 1918 when
Bulgaria left the war. The division contributed to Greeces defeat in the GrecoTurkish War, contributed to the collapse of
the second republic and the establishment
of the dictatorial Metaxas regime in
August 1936, and dominated Greek political
and civil life for decades.
Robert B. Kane

This political division of Greece during


World War I resulted from the opposing positions of the Greek king Constantine I (1868
1923) and Prime Minister Eleutherios Venizelos (18641936) on whether or not Greece
should remain neutral (Constantine) or enter
the war on the Entente side (Venize los).
When World War I began, many Greeks, the
senior Greek generals, and Constantine, married to Wilhelm IIs sister Sofia (1870
1932), favored neutrality. However, Venizelos
saw an alliance with the Entente as an opportunity to gain new territory.
In January 1915, after Britain offered
Greece territory in Asia Minor, Venizelos
tried to force a bill through parliament by
which Greece would join the Entente. Strong
opposition from the king and the army generals forced Venizelos to resign. Venizeloss
Liberal Party won the resulting general election in June and selected Venizelos as prime
minister. Constantine, however, delayed ratification of his appointment until August.
In December 1915, Venize los allowed
British and French troops to land at Thessaloniki. Many Greeks viewed the landing as
a violation of Greek sovereignty. The disagreement between Constantine and Venizelos deepened after the king authorized
German and Bulgarian forces to occupy a
Greek fort in Macedonia.
In December 1915, Constantine forced
Venize los to resign again and dissolved
the parliament. The German-Bulgarian

197

198

NATO in the Balkans


See also: Constantine I, King of Greece
(18681923); Greco-Turkish War, 1919
1922; Macedonian Front, 19161918;
Metaxas, Ioannis (18711941); Venize los,
Eleutherios (18641936)

Further Reading
Forster, Edward Seymour. A Short History of
Modern Greece, 18211956. New York:
Praeger, 1958.
Koliopoulos, Giannes, and Thanos Veremes.
Greece: The Modern Sequel from 1831 to
the Present. New York: New York University Press, 2002.
Pallis, Alexander Anastasius. Greeces Anatolian Ventureand after a Survey of the Diplomatic and Political Aspects of the Greek
Expedition to Asia Minor (19151922).
London, Methuen & Co., Ltd., 1937.

NATO in the Balkans


Balkan countries such as Bulgaria and
Romania served in the Soviet-dominated
Warsaw Pact during the Cold War. Greece

served in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), and rebellious Communist
states such as Albania left the Warsaw Pact
in 1968. The former Yugoslavia never joined
the Warsaw Pact and participated in the
Non-Aligned Movement. The end of the
Cold War, the Soviet Unions collapse, and
Yugoslavias disintegration into vicious
internecine conflicts and separate nationstates ended the Balkans Cold War security
infrastructure.
The subsequent two decades would see
NATO gradually expand its presence into the
Balkans with some opposition expressed by
Russia which considered the Balkans, particularly Serbia, to be a core area of its security
interests. Balkan countries besides Greece
joining NATO as of early 2012 include
Albania, Bulgaria, Croatia, Romania, and
Slovenia. Bosnia-Herzegovina, the Former
Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Montenegro, and Serbia are Balkan countries participating in the NATO-affiliated Partnership
for Peace Program.

A convoy of NATO soldiers drives through the Bosnian capital Sarajevo during a patrol,
October 1, 1997. (AP Photo/Hidajet Delic)

Navarino, Battle of, 1827

NATOs Balkan membership seeks to participate in alliance security assistance programs, promote opportunities for security
sector reform and professional military development, reorient national defense toward contemporary security challenges such as human
trafficking and counterterrorism, and place
national defense responsibilities within a collective security infrastructure allowing more
optimal use of finite financial resources and
reducing the chances of interstate conflict.
Some Balkan countries sought to prove their
commitment to western security architectures
by supporting Operation Iraqi Freedom with
Albania, Bulgaria, and Romania contributing
forces. Balkan countries participating in
NATOs International Security Assistance
Force (ISAF) operations in Afghanistan as of
early 2012 include Albania, Bosnia and
Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, the Former
Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Greece,
Montenegro, Romania, Slovenia, and Turkey.
Some of these Balkan countries soldiers
were killed while participating in these
military operations.
Contemporary and emerging security
concerns confronting NATO in the Balkans
include acute financial crises affecting
European Union (EU) countries such as
Greece that may produce civil unrest and
fracture the Eurozone, lingering ethnic and
sectarian tensions in former Yugoslav countries requiring the presence of peacekeeping
forces, Balkan countries serving as drug and
human trafficking transit centers, tension
between Russia and Balkan countries that
seek to integrate into NATO and the EU,
concerns over the future direction of Turkish
foreign policy, economic development problems in Kosovo and other Balkan countries,
and what role Russia and Turkey might
play in supplying energy resources to
Balkan countries.
Bert Chapman

See also: Kosovo War, 19981999; Yugoslav


Wars, 19911995

Further Reading
Nation, R. Craig. NATO in the Western Balkans: A Force for Stability? Southeastern
Europe 35, no. 1 (February 2011): 12037.
Seroka, Jim. Security Considerations in the
Western Balkans: NATOs Evolution and
Expansion. East European Quarterly 41,
no. 1 (Spring 2007): 2538.
U.S. Congress. House Committee on Foreign
Affairs. The Balkans after the Independence of Kosovo and on the Eve of NATO
Enlargement. Washington, DC: GPO,
2008. http://purl.access.gpo.gov/GPO/
LPS94875.
U.S. Congress. Senate Committee on Foreign
Relations. Unfinished Business in Southeast
Europe: Opportunities and Challenges in
the Western Balkans. Washington, DC:
GPO, 2010. http://purl.fdlp.gov/GPO/
gpo1335.

Navarino, Battle of, 1827


The Battle of Navarino Bay on October 20,
1827, was the most important engagement
of the Greek War for Independence (1822
1832). With Ottoman and Egyptian forces
fully in control of Greece, representatives
of the French, British, and Russian governments concluded the Treaty of London. It
called on the Ottomans to agree to an armistice and for the Egyptians to withdraw.
Should the Ottomans reject an armistice,
the three allied powers would come to the
aid of the Greeks with their naval forces. In
the meantime, the British made a strong but
ultimately unsuccessful diplomatic effort to
get Egyptian ruler Mehmet Ali (1769
1849) to remove his forces from Greece.
On August 16, the European powers sent
a note to the Sublime Porte demanding an
armistice. When the Ottomans rejected it

199

200

Navarino, Battle of, 1827

on August 29, the British, French, and Russian governments issued orders to their naval
commanders in the Mediterranean to cut off
waterborne Ottoman and Egyptian resupply
to Greece. In late August 1827, despite warnings from the European governments not to
do so, Ali sent a large squadron with reinforcements to Navarino Bay (Pylos) on the
west coast of the Peloponnese. On September 8, it arrived and joined Ottoman ships
already there. On September 12, a British
squadron under Vice Admiral Sir Edward
Codrington (17701851) arrived off the bay.
The French and Russian governments also
had dispatched squadrons to Greece.
On September 25, Codrington and French
admiral Henry Gauthier de Rigny (1782
1835) met with Ibrahim Pasha (1789
1848), the Egyptian commander in Greece,
to discuss a mediation arrangement already
accepted by the Greeks. Ibrahim agreed to
an armistice while awaiting instructions
from the sultan. Leaving a frigate at Navarino Bay to watch the Egyptian and Ottoman
ships there, Codrington then withdrew to the
British-controlled Ionian island of Zante
(Zakynthos).
Ibrahim learned that while he was expected
to observe a cease-fire, Greek naval units
under British mercenary commanders were
continuing operations in the Gulf of Corinth,
at Epirus, and at the port of Patras. Then
during September 2930, a Greek steamer
warship, the Karteria, sank nine Ottoman
ships off Salona (Split) in Dalmatia. Codrington sent messages to warn these British officers, who were not under his command, to
desist from such operations; this had little
effect. Ibrahim duly protested and, when
nothing changed, decided to act.
On October 1, Ibrahim ordered ships from
Navarino Bay to assist the Ottoman garrison
at Patras. Codringtons squadron intercepted
these ships at the entrance to the Gulf of

Calydon and forced them to return to Navarino. On the night of October 34, Ibrahim
personally led another relief effort.
Although they managed to avoid detection
by the British picket ship at Navarino Bay
in the darkness, a strong lee wind prevented
his forces from entering the Gulf of Calydon. He was forced to anchor off Papas and
wait for the storm to end. This allowed
Codrington time to come up with his
squadron, and firing warning shots, he
forced Ibrahim to return to Navarino Bay.
Ibrahim continued land operations, which
included the wholesale burning of Greek
villages and fields. The fires were clearly
visible from the allied ships. A British landing party reported that the Greek population
of Messenia was close to starvation. On
October 13, Codrington was joined off
Navarino Bay by the French squadron
under de Rigny and a Russian squadron.
On October 20, 1827, following
futile attempts to contact Ibrahim Pasha,
Codrington consulted with the other allied
commanders and made the decision to enter
Navarino Bay with the combined British,
French, and Russian squadrons. The allies
had 11 ships of the line and 15 other warships. Codrington flew his flag in the ship
of the line Asia (84 guns). He also had two
74-gun ships of the line, four frigates, and
four brigs. French admiral de Rigny had
four 74-gun ships of the line, one frigate,
and two schooners. The Russian squadron
consisted of four 74-gun ships of the line
and four frigates. The Egyptians and
Ottomans had 65 or 66 warships in Navarino
harbor: three Ottoman ships of the line (2 of
84 guns each and 1 of 76 guns), four Egyptian frigates of 64 guns each, 15 Ottoman
frigates of 48 guns each, 18 Ottoman and 8
Egyptian corvettes of 14 to 18 guns each, 4
Ottoman and 8 Egyptian brigs of 19 guns
each, and 56 Egyptian fire brigs. There

Nedic, Milan

were also some Ottoman transports and


smaller craft.
Around noon on October 20, the allied
ships sailed in two lines into Navarino Bay.
The British and French formed one line,
and the Russians formed the other. The
Ottomans demanded that Codrington withdraw, but the British admiral replied that he
was there to give orders, not receive them.
He threatened that if any shots were fired at
the allied ships, he would destroy the
Egyptian-Ottoman fleet.
The Egyptian-Ottoman ships were lying
at anchor in a long crescent-shape formation
with their flanks protected by shore batteries. At 2:00 p.m., the allied ships began
filing into the bay. They then took up position inside the crescent. The British
ships faced the center of the EgyptianOttoman line, while the French were on the
Ottoman left and the Russians were on the
Ottoman right. The shore batteries at Fort
Navarino made no effort to contest the
allied movement. Still, Codringtons plan
appeared highly dangerous, for it invited
the Ottomans to surround the allied ships,
which, with the prevailing wind out of the
southwest, risked being trapped. The plan
simply revealed the complete confidence of
the allies in their tactical superiority.
Codrington dispatched the frigate Dartmouth to an Ottoman ship in position to
command the entrance of the bay with an
order that it move. The captain of the Dartmouth sent a dispatch boat to the Ottoman
ship, which then opened musket fire on it,
killing an officer and several seamen. Firing
immediately became general, with shore
batteries also opening up on the allied ships.
The ensuing four-hour engagement, essentially a series of individual gun duels by floating batteries at close range without an overall
plan, was really more of a slaughter than a
battle. Three-quarters of the ships in the

Egyptian-Ottoman fleet were either destroyed


by allied fire or set alight by their own crews
to prevent their capture. Only one, the Sultane, surrendered. Allied personnel losses
were 177 killed and 469 wounded; estimates
of the Ottoman and Egyptian killed or
wounded were in excess of 4,000 men.
News of the allied victory was received
with great popular enthusiasm in virtually
all of Europe. The Porte, furious at what
had happened, demanded reparations.
Recalled to Britain, Codrington was
subsequently acquitted on a charge of disobeying orders.
The Battle of Navarino Bay removed any
impediment to the Russian Black Sea Fleet,
and in April 1828, Russia declared war on
Turkey. That August, Egypt withdrew from
hostilities, virtually ending the war. In the
May 1832 Treaty of London, Greece
secured its independence. The Battle of
Navarino Bay, which made all this possible,
is also noteworthy as the last major engagement between ships of the line in the age of
fighting sail.
Spencer C. Tucker
See also: Greek War of Independence, 1821
1832; Russo-Ottoman War, 18281829

Further Reading
Anderson, R. C. Naval Wars in the Levant,
15591853. Liverpool: University Press of
Liverpool, 1952.
James, William M. The Naval History of Great
Britain. Vol. 6. London: Richard Bentley,
1859.
Ortzen, Len. Guns at Sea: The Worlds Great
Naval Battles. London: Cox and Wyman,
1976.

Nedic, Milan (18771946)


Serbian general and politician Milan Nedic
served as the chief of the general staff of

201

202

Nedic, Milan

the Yugoslav army and minister of war of


Yugoslavia before World War II and the
prime minister of the Nazi-backed puppet
government of Serbia during the war. Nedic
was born in Grocka near Belgrade, Serbia,
on September 7, 1877. After completing
the gymnasium and Military Academy in
1895, he received an officers commission
in the Serbian army in 1904. Before World
War I, he served as a staff officer and fought
in the Balkan Wars. During the war, he
served in several positions, retreated with
the Serbian army and thousands of civilians
from Serbia through Albania to the Greek
islands over the winter of 19151916, and
participated in the allied breakthrough in
Macedonia in September 1918. After the
war, he continued to rise in position and
rank and was promoted to general in 1923.
Between 1934 and 1935, he commanded
the General Staff of the Yugoslav Royal
Army.
In 1939, Nedic became the minister of the
army and navy. However, because he disapproved of a potential alliance with Nazi Germanyprobably because of his uneasiness
with Germanys ally, Fascist Italy, and
because of the opposition by some Italian
Fascists to the existence of a Yugoslav state
the regent Paul (18931976) dismissed
Nedic on November 6, 1940. Nedic welcomed the April 1941 coup that deposed
the regents pro-Axis regime and fought
against the Germans when they invaded
Yugoslavia.
After the Germans occupied Yugoslavia,
they divided the country into an independent Serbia and Croatia and allowed Bulgaria, Hungary, and Italy to annex other parts
of the former kingdom. German Air Force
general Heinrich Danckelmann (1889
1947) asked Nedic to lead the government
of German-occupied Serbia, and Nedic
accepted the offer on August 29, to pacify

Serb resistance. On September 1, 1941, in a


radio broadcast, Nedic declared his intention
to save the Serbian people. He also spoke
against active resistance to the Germans
because of the Nazi declaration to execute
50 Serbs for every wounded German soldier
and 100 for every soldier killed. His
administration promoted anti-Semitism and
anti-Communism to convince Serbs that
these groups were their enemies.
The Serbian government under Nedic
accepted refugees, mostly of Serbian
descent, from other parts of the former
Yugoslavia. Despite his collaboration, the
German occupation authorities had no
respect for his authority and caused the
deaths of over 300,000 Serbs, mostly from
German reprisals in retaliation for Serbian
resistance attacks. The worst atrocity was
the Kragujevac massacre, in which the
Germans murdered at least 2,300 Serbian
civilians during October 2021, 1941. The
Nedic regime also aided the Germans in the
murder of 14,500 Serbian Jews (90 percent
of the Serbian Jews) by August 1942. Yet,
Nedic also secretly supported the Cetniks,
the resistance led by former Yugoslav army
Colonel Draz a Mihajlovic (18931946),
with money and arms.
On October 4, 1944, Nedic disbanded his
government as the Communist Partisans,
led by Josip Broz Tito (18921980),
advanced on Belgrade and, two days later,
fled to Kitzbu hel, Austria (then part of
Germany). On January 1, 1946, the British
forces, occupying that part of Austria,
handed Nedic over to the new Yugoslav
government, headed by Tito. He was
charged with treason and imprisoned in
Belgrade. On February 5, the newspapers
reported that Nedic committed suicide by
jumping out of a window of his prison
while the guards were not looking.
Robert B. Kane

Neuilly, Treaty of, 1920


See also: C etniks; Mihajlovic , Dragoljub
Draz a (18921946); Serbia in World War
II; Tito, Josip Broz (18921980); Yugoslavia
in World War II

Further Reading
Cohen, Philip J. Serbias Secret War:
Propaganda and the Deceit of History. College Station: Texas A&M University Press,
1996.
Costa, Nicolas J. Shattered Illusions: Albania,
Greece and Yugoslavia. Boulder, CO: East
European Monographs, 1998.
Pavlowitch, Stevan K. The Improbable Survivor: Yugoslavia and Its Problems, 1918
1988. Columbus: Ohio State University
Press, 1988.

Neuilly, Treaty of, 1920


The Treaty of Neuilly between the victorious
Allied and Associated Powers and Bulgaria
was signed in the Paris suburb of Neuillysur-Seine on November 27, 1919, a product
of the Paris Peace Conference. Ostensibly
founded on the principle of national selfdetermination, the treaty was actually the outcome of intense diplomatic pressure on the
part of Bulgarias victorious neighbors, dictated by the extremely complex history of
national sovereignty in that part of Europe.
Rival territorial claims in the area dated
back at least to the Treaty of Berlin of
1878, which had created the Principality
of Bulgaria. However, many Bulgarians
remained in territory such as Macedonia, controlled by the Ottoman Empire, or in Serbia
and Romania. Bulgaria was the chief victor
in the First Balkan War in 19121913, securing a significant portion of Macedonia. In the
Second Balkan War of 1913, Bulgaria recovered more of Macedonia and secured access
to the Aegean Sea in Thrace, but it also
yielded more land to Greece and Serbia
elsewhere.

In World War I, Bulgaria saw an opportunity to further its claims in Macedonia and to
make good its losses in the Second Balkan
War. Although most Bulgarians favored
joining the Triple Entente because of ties to
Russia, Czar Ferdinand (18611948) and Premier Vasil Radoslavov (18541929) joined
the Triple Alliance in October 1915. At the
end of the war, the army overthrew Ferdinand,
who abdicated in October 1918 and was succeeded by his son Boris III (18941943) and
a new premier, Aleksandu r Stamboliski
(18791923); however, this did not change
the fact that Bulgaria was on the losing side.
Its Balkan rivals Greece and Serbia had
chosen the winning side, and they pressed
the conferees in Paris to favor their interests.
As with the other peace treaties, Part I of
the Treaty of Neuilly reproduced the 26
articles of the League of Nations Covenant.
Part II defined the new Bulgarian frontiers.
Article 27-1 required Bulgaria to recognize
the Serb-Croat-Slovene State, which
became Yugoslavia, and its new frontiers.
The future Yugoslavia gained part of
western Bulgaria and also regained some of
the Strumitsa Valley area, which had been
ceded to Bulgaria in 1913. Article 27-2
defined the new frontier with Greece, with
grievous consequences for Bulgaria since it
lost western Thrace to Greece and thus port
facilities on the Aegean Sea at Dedeagach
(Greek: Alexandroupolis). Articles 27-4
and 27-5 confirmed the Bulgarian frontier
with Romania, with the definitive loss of
southern Dobrudja (Bulgarian: Dobrudza),
which had been part of Bulgaria since 1878
but was ceded in 1913. Article 27-3 delineated the only gains made by Bulgaria; not
surprisingly, these minor acquisitions were
at the expense of another vanquished
power, the Ottoman Empire.
Part III contained the political clauses.
Article 59 compelled Bulgaria to recognize

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204

Nikola I, King of Montenegro

the changes in central and southwestern


Europe, including the new frontiers of
Austria, Hungary, Greece, Poland, Romania,
the Serb-Croat-Slovene state, and the
Czecho-Slovak state. As a result of these
territorial changes, Bulgaria, which had suffered 100,000 men killed in the war, now
lost another 300,000 people.
The Military Clauses of Part IV demilitarized Bulgaria, abolished obligatory military service (Article 65) and stipulated that
the Bulgarian army shall be exclusively
employed for the maintenance of order
within Bulgarian territory and for the control
of the frontiers (Article 66). Article 69 limited the army to 20,000 men, supported by
10,000 policemen and 3,000 frontier guards.
Article 78 banned construction of new fortifications in Bulgaria, while Article 81 prohibited manufacture or importation of arms,
munitions, and war materiel.
Part VII dealt with reparations. Article
121 stipulated reparation payments in the
amount that Bulgaria would be able to pay,
$445 milliona realistic sum, especially as
it was subsequently reduced considerably
by the Reparation Commission.
The Treaty of Neuilly went into effect on
August 9, 1920, and Bulgaria joined the
League of Nations on December 16, 1920.
The country remained bitterly divided
politically. The Macedonian question was
particularly vexing and led to a succession
of governments in addition to costing Stamboliski his life in 1923.
Antoine Capet
See also: Boris III, Czar of Bulgaria (1894
1943); Bulgaria in World War I; Stamboliski,
Aleksandur (18791923)

Further Reading
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
The Treaties of Peace, 19191923. Vol. 2,
Containing the Treaties of Neuilly and

Se`vres, the Treaties between the United


States and Germany, Austria and Hungary
Respectively. New York: Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, 1924.
Crompton, R. J. A Concise History of Bulgaria. New York: Cambridge University
Press, 1997.
Genov, Georgi P. Bulgaria and the Treaty of
Neuilly. Sofia: H. G. Danov, 1935.
MacMillan, Margaret. Paris 1919: Six Months
That Changed the World. New York: Random House, 2002.
Treaty of Peace between the Allied and Associated Powers and Bulgaria, and Protocol:
Signed at Neuilly-sur-Seine, November 27,
1919. London: HMSO, 1920.

Nikola I, King of Montenegro


(18411921)
Prince (18601910) and then king (1910
1918) of Montenegro, Nikola Mirkov
Petrovic -Njegos was born at Njegos on
October 7, 1841, the son of Duke Mirko
Petrovic-Njegos (18201867) and Anastasia
Martinovic (18241894). He was educated in
Trieste and Paris. When his uncle, Prince
Danilo Petrovic-Njegos (18261860), was
assassinated in 1860, Nikola became the ruling prince of Montenegro and embarked on
a long process of modernizing his tiny, backward principality. He introduced many
administrative, legal, and educational reforms
and oversaw the construction of transportation and communications systems. He granted
constitutional government in 1905 and subsequently declared himself king on August 28,
1910. Nikola married Milena Vukotic (1847
1923) in 1860. Of their 12 children, five
daughters and one son married into European
royal families, earning Nikola the sobriquet of
the father-in-law of Europe.
With the support of his friend, Czar
Alexander II of Russia (18181881), Nikola

North Atlantic Treaty Organization

proved an able military leader. Under his


leadership, the Montenegrins repelled a
Turkish attack in 1862 and conducted a brilliant campaign against the Turks during
18761877, thereby winning their independence from the Ottoman Empire while doubling the size of their country. King Nikola
also led Montenegro effectively in the
Balkan Wars of 19121913 and supported
Serbia against the Central Powers in
World War I. The small but courageous
Montenegrin army covered the retreat of the
Serbian army through Albania in November
December 1915 but was forced to surrender
to the Austro-Hungarians on January 17,
1916. King Nikola then went into exile in
Italy. On November 26, 1918, he was deposed
by the Montenegrin National Assembly, and
Montenegro was annexed by Serbia, thus
becoming the only Allied state to lose its
independence in World War I.
King Nikola I transformed Montenegro
from a remote Balkan principality into a
modern European state and led it effectively
in peace and war, only to lose his kingdom
to the Greater Serbia ambitions of his sonin-law, King Peter I of Serbia (18441921),
and the rising tide of South Slav nationalism.
He died in exile at Cap dAntibes, France,
on March 2, 1921 and was buried at San
Remo, Italy. In 1989 his remains were
reinterred at Cetinje.
Charles R. Shrader
See also: Montenegro in the Balkan Wars;
Montenegro in World War I

Further Reading
Glenny, Misha. The Balkans: Nationalism War
and the Great Powers, 18041999. New
York: Viking, 2000.
Nikola I Petrovic Njegos . Autobiografija;
Memoari; Putopisi. Edited by Dimitrije
Jovetic and Branko Bankevic . Cetinje,
Montenegro: ISRO Obod, 1988.

Roberts, Elizabeth. Realm of the Black Mountain: A History of Montenegro. Ithaca, NY:
Cornell University Press, 2007.
Treadway, John D. The Falcon and the Eagle:
Montenegro and Austria-Hungary, 1908
1914. West Lafayette, IN: Purdue University Press, 1983, 1998.

North Atlantic Treaty


Organization
The North Atlantic Treaty Organization
(NATO) is a mutual defense alliance of
nations from Europe and North America.
The North Atlantic Treaty was signed in
1949 by Great Britain, France, Belgium,
the Netherlands, Luxembourg, the United
States, Canada, Denmark, Iceland, Italy,
Norway, and Portugal. NATO was organized
to defend member nations from the possible
aggression of the Soviet Union and the
nations of Eastern Europe, which formed
the Warsaw Treaty Organization six years
later. Originating as an anti-Communist alliance during the Cold War, NATO has sought
to redefine its role as East-West tensions
have eased.
NATO membership expanded in 1952 to
include Greece and Turkey. West Germany
entered in 1955, and Spain in 1982. U.S.
general Dwight D. Eisenhower (1890
1969) was appointed the first supreme allied
commander in 1950. In addition to a system
of collective defense, NATO members
pledged to work toward reaching agreement
with Warsaw Pact countries on equitable
and verifiable arms reduction and to
cooperate within the alliance in economic,
scientific, and cultural areas.
Differences between the U.S. government
and its European allies have sometimes
caused problems for the alliance. U.S. arms
were necessary at the end of World War II

205

206

North Atlantic Treaty Organization

when European economies were shattered,


and the United States assumed leadership
of the alliance. As the European nations
recovered, however, some envisioned different arrangements. In the 1960s, for example,
French president Charles de Gaulle (1890
1970) resisted military integration, withdrawing French forces from NATO and
demanding that all allied troops quit French
soil.
Europe and the United States have often
approached the deployment of arms with
different goals. In the 1970s, the U.S.
government requested that the European
members increase their defense spending.
That request was well received but not carried out due to economic recession and the
growing antinuclear movement in Europe.
The U.S. government in 1985 asked for
European cooperation in the development of
the space-based laser defense system planned
under the Strategic Defense Initiative. France
refused outright, and the issue became a
source of contention. In 1986, NATO defense
ministers endorsed the production of new
chemical weapons by the United States,
though a minority believed such a move
might undermine the Disarmament Conference of 40 nations then at Geneva trying to
negotiate a ban on such weapons.
Disarmament too has been a matter needing careful consideration by the different
members. Often negotiated by leaders of
the United States and the Soviet Union,
European heads of state responsive to their
own constituents have sometimes wanted to
proceed faster or slower on the issue of disarmament. Debates over whether to begin
with conventional or nuclear weapons have
also responded to different geographic
locations.
With the 1989 demolition of the Berlin
Wall (once described as the ultimate symbol for NATOs existence), many believed

that the United States and Europe might


decouple their defense strategies, but it did
not happen. Instead, the role of NATO
expanded to permit out-of-area activity
(something that was not permitted during
the Persian Gulf War). More responsibility for such internal struggles as that in
Yugoslavia had also developed, though not
in time to prevent that countrys slow
destruction.
As the countries of Eastern Europe broke
away from the Soviet Union between 1989
and 1991, they experienced new security
concerns and petitioned to join NATO. The
North Atlantic Cooperation Council was
established as a forum for dialogue between
those former foes. NATO leaders initially
rejected military alliance as premature,
endorsing instead a political approach to
security. By 1995, NATO policy required
that applicants demonstrate a commitment
to democracy and human rights, a freemarket economy, and democratic control of
the military.
The first countries to satisfy NATOs
requirements were the Czech Republic,
Hungary, and Poland, which were admitted
into the organization in March 1999. Five
years later, in April 2004, seven former
Communist statesEstonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Bulgaria, Romania, Slovakia, and
Sloveniajoined the alliance. Russia also
has been admitted to the organization as a
junior partner with limited power.
The North Atlantic Council (NAC) is currently NATOs highest civilian authority.
Each nation has a permanent representative
on the council, and those representatives
meet at least once a week. The council may
also meet at the foreign minister or head of
state level. NAC decisions are made by
common consent rather than majority vote.
The alliance includes an International
Secretariat composed of staff from all the

Novi Pazar, Sanjak of

member nations. The secretary general


heads the International Secretariat in addition to serving as head of the council, the
Defense Planning Committee, the Nuclear
Planning Committee, and the Committee
on the Challenges of Modern Society.
NATOs military structure is headed by the
Military Committee, which consists of the
chiefs of staff or their representatives from
all member nations except France. The committee is led by a chair, who is elected for a
term of two to three years. The Military Committee makes recommendations on military
matters to the NAC and to the Defense Planning Committee. It also gives directions to
the three NATO supreme commands: the
NATO Allied Command, Europe, in Belgium;
the NATO Allied Command, Atlantic, in Norfolk, Virginia; and the NATO Allied Command, Channel, in Northwood, Britain.
As of this writing, NATO had a staff of
about 1,200 at its headquarters in Brussels
and an international military staff of some
430. It is funded from the military budgets
of member nations. The amounts donated
are determined through the coordination of
military plans between NATO and the
member nations. The official languages of
the alliance are English and French.
In April 2009, the 28 member states held
meetings on both sides of the Rhine in Kehl,
Germany, and Strasbourg, France, to commemorate NATOs 60th anniversary. At the
summit, French president Nicolas Sarkozy
(1955) announced that France would be
rejoining NATO as a full member, 43 years
after President de Gaulle withdrew the country from the alliances military command.
Richard C. Hall

Further Reading
Coffey, Joseph I. The Future Role of NATO.
Reissue. New York: Foreign Policy Association, 1997.

Cornish, Paul. Partnership in Crisis: The U.S.,


Europe and the Fall and Rise of NATO.
London: Cassell, 1997.
Kaplan, Lawrence S. The Long Entanglement:
NATOs First Fifty Years. Westport, CT:
Praeger, 1999.

Novi Pazar, Sanjak of


Novi Pazar was a sanjak (administrative district that collectively composed a vilayet, or
province, of the Ottoman Empire after 1864)
that existed until 1913 and consisted of
territory in present-day Serbia, Kosovo, and
Montenegro. The city of Novi Pazar was the
administrative seat of the sanjak of Novi Pazar.
In the Middle Ages, the region was part of
the Serbian state of Raska, with its capital,
the city of Ras, located near the present-day
city of Novi Pazar. The region later became
part of subsequent Serbian states until the
Ottoman conquest of the Balkans in the late
1400s. During the centuries of Ottoman rule,
the Sanjak was a part of the vilayet of Bosnia
until 1878. From 1878 until 1913 and the
peace settlement after the First Balkan War,
Novi Pazar was part of the vilayet of Kosovo.
Following the Russo-Ottoman War of
18771878, the Congress of Berlin of 1878
allowed the Ottoman Empire to retain
territorial sovereignty of the district but
authorized Austria-Hungary to establish military garrisons in the district where they
remained until 1909. At the start of the First
Balkan War in October 1912, Serbian and
Montenegrin troops occupied the Sanjak, and
Serbia and Montenegro divided the territory
as part of the Treaty of London, concluded
in May 1913. Over the ensuing decades,
many Bosnian and Albanian inhabitants of
the sanjak immigrated to Turkey where they
established a number of colonies. Over time,
many of the Sanjak Bosnians married Turks.

207

208

Novi Pazar, Sanjak of

During World War I, Austria-Hungary


occupied the sanjak. After 1918, the sanjak
became part of the Kingdom of Serbs,
Croats and Slovenes, which, in 1929,
became the Kingdom of Yugoslavia. During
World War II, the Italians occupied most of
the region as part of Montenegro, although
the city of Novi Pazar became part of
German-occupied Serbia. After September 1943, the Germans occupied the sanjak.
In 1945, Serbia and Montenegro, now
socialist republics of postwar Yugoslavia,
again divided the Sanjak, according to the
1913 division. As of this writing, the region
remained divided between the independent
states of Serbia, Montenegro, and Kosovo.
Robert B. Kane

See also: Balkan War, First, 19121913;


Balkan Wars, 19121913, Causes

Further Reading
Albertini, Luigi. The Origins of the War of
1914. London: Oxford University Press,
1952.
Langer, William L. European Alliances and
Alignments, 18711890. New York: Knopf,
1950.
Shaw, Stanford J., and Ezel Kural Shaw. History of the Ottoman Empire and Modern
Turkey. 2 vols. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 19761977.
Singleton, Fred Bernard. A Short History of the
Yugoslav Peoples. Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 1985.

O
Obrenovic, Milan (18541901)

him a wildly unpopular figure there. In


1886, Milan and his wife, Queen Natalija
(18591941), announced their separation
after years of rumors concerning the kings
infidelity. The development outraged many
Serbs, and in January 1889, the king promulgated a new, liberal constitution in hopes
of regaining his popularity. On March 6,
1889, Milan suddenly abdicated for reasons
that are not entirely clear.
This move made Milans young son,
Alexander (18761903), king. Milan, meanwhile, went into exile in Paris as a private
citizen. In 1892, he renounced his Serbian
nationality in hopes that the move would
increase support for Alexanders leadership.
In 1893, Alexander took complete control of
the Serbian government and invited his father
to return to Serbia, which he did in January 1894. Milan now became Alexanders
principal adviser and confidante, but the
return to Serbia of Alexanders exiled mother,
Natalija, in the spring of 1895 forced Milan to
again leave Serbia.
In 1897, Milan again returned to his homeland, and Alexander promptly appointed him
commander in chief of Serbias army, a position in which Milan particularly excelled. In
1899, Milan was the target of a failed assassination attempt, which had in part been driven
by growing frustration with Alexanders
increasingly heavy-handed rule. Milans heretofore good relationship with his son quickly
evaporated, however, when Alexander
announced his plan to marry Draga Masin
(18641903), a union to which Milan was bitterly opposed. Milan left Serbia in 1900,

Milan Obrenovic (ruled as King Milan II)


was a Serbian leader and monarch. He was
born in Marasesti, Moldavia, on August 22,
1854, into the ruling Serbian royal family.
In 1868, while just 14 years old, he succeeded to the throne as Prince Milan under
a three-man regency. Four years later, upon
reaching the age of majority, he took the
reins of government and began a pronounced tilt toward the Austro-Hungarian
Empire. Although he was a keenly intelligent and well-informed leader, Milans
obstinacy and insistence on catering to the
Austrians ultimately proved highly problematic. As he attempted to modernize Serbia
and take advantage of its natural resources,
his government increased taxes, which did
not sit well with many Serbs. And his hesitancy to support his kingdoms pan-Slavism
or rebellions against the Ottomans made his
rule increasingly unpopular. His military
loss to the Ottomans in 1876 only compounded his problems. However, his successful bid to achieve full independence for
Serbia at the end of the 18771878 RussoOttoman War burnished his image, at least
for a time.
In 1882, Milan was officially crowned
King Milan II. Serbias loss in its war
against rival Bulgaria in 1886 added to his
political woes, however, as did his continued
tilt toward Austria-Hungary, which was not
supported by a majority of Serbian political
leaders. In 1883, Milan quashed a major
peasant revolt in eastern Serbia, making

209

210

Obrenovic, Milos

this time permanently, and finally settled in


Vienna, where he died suddenly on February 11, 1901.
Paul G. Pierpaoli Jr.
See also: Obrenovic , Milos (17801860);
Russo-Ottoman War, 18061812; RussoOttoman War, 18281829; Russo-Ottoman
War, 18771878

Further Reading
Cox, John K. The History of Serbia. Westport,
CT: Greenwood Press, 2002.
Pavlowitch, Stevan K. Serbia: The History
behind the Name. London: C. Hurst & Co.
Publishers, 2002.

Obrenovic, Milos (17801860)


Milos Obrenovic was a leader of the Serbian
war of independence against Ottoman rule
and was the first head of an autonomous Serbian state since the fifteenth century. Obrenovic was born on March 18, 1780, in the
village of Gronja Dobrinja in western Serbia, then under Ottoman authority. His birth
name was Teodorovic. He later adopted the
patronymic of his half-brother. He participated in the first Serbian uprising during
18041813. He then led the second Serbian
revolt in 1815. Under an agreement with
the Ottomans that same year, Serbia gained
some autonomy but remained under Ottoman rule. Obrenovic regarded the leader of
the first Serbian revolt, George Petrovic Karageorge (17681818) as a rival, and after
Karageorges return to Serbia, in 1817, had
him murdered and his head sent to the Ottoman sultan. This began a century of competition and feuding between the two Serbian
families. Agreements with the Ottoman
sultan in 1830 and 1833 recognized Obrenovic as the hereditary prince of Serbia
with a defined autonomous territory.

Obrenovic s autocratic rule met with


much domestic opposition. Tiring of continual revolts, he abdicated on June 15, 1839,
in favor of his son Milan, who soon died.
Afterward, Milos s son Mihailo (1823
1868) ruled until his deposition in 1842.
The son of Karageorge, Alexander Karageorgevic (18061885) then became the
prince of Serbia. Meanwhile, Milos lived in
the Habsburg Empire and the Romanian
principalities. When Alexander Karageorgevic was deposed as prince of Serbia
in 1858, Milos Obrenovic returned from
abroad on December 23, 1858, to rule
again as prince of Serbia. He died on September 26, 1860, in Belgrade. Although he
had an autocratic and irascible personality,
Milos Obrenovic deserves great credit as
the founder of the Serbian state.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Karageorge (George Petrovic; 1768
1818); Serbian War of Independence, 1804
1817

Further Reading
Judah, Tim. The Serbs: History, Myth and the
Destruction of Yugoslavia. New Haven,
CT: Yale University Press, 1997.
Petrovich, Michael Boro. A History of Modern
Serbia 18041918. Vol. 1. New York:
Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1976.
Stavrianos, L. S. The Balkans since 1453. New
York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1958.

Odessa, Siege of, 1941


The siege of Odessa, which lasted from
August 10 to October 16, 1941, was one of
the most substantial military campaigns for
the Romanian army against the Soviet
Union in World War II. Odessa was the
main Black Sea port and a major communication hub of the Soviet Union. When the

Odessa, Siege of, 1941

Germans asked the Romanian forces to conduct this largely independent action at
Odessa, at first the Romanian Fourth Army
attempted to seize the city by direct assault.
But the initial assault failed, the battle
turned into a siege, and it took Romanian
forces four separate attempts to finally take
the city. The siege of Odessa became an
example of positional warfare that was reminiscent of the tactics of World War I, and
the victory came at a huge cost to the
Romanians.
The Romanian participation was a result
of Romanias troubled relationship with the
neighboring countries in prior years. Romania declared neutrality at the onset of
World War II, but the countrys position
quickly deteriorated. Hungary, Bulgaria,
and the Soviet Union demanded the return
of territories that Romania seized from
them during the Russian Revolution. Having
no reliable allies, Romania was forced to
surrender a third of its territory. Fearing further losses and humiliating concessions, it
chose to align itself with Hitlers Germany.
The loss of strategic position also led to the
abdication of King Carol II (18931953)
and the eventual establishment of General
Antonescus (18821946) dictatorship.
When Hitler informed the Romanian dictator on June 11, 1941, of its plans to invade
the Soviet Union, Antonescu offered his
support for the campaign. The Romanian
hopes were to regain Bessarabia and
northern Bukovina, previously lost to the
Soviet Union in 1940.
The siege of Odessa resulted in a nominal
victory for the Romanian forces when the
Soviet forces evacuated the city on October 16, 1941. The Romanian losses, however, were staggering. The Romanian
forces had almost 100,000 casualties, and
some divisions lost almost 80 percent of
their men; 340,223 were initially deployed,

of which 17,729 were killed, 63,345 were


wounded, and 11,471 were missing in
action. By the end of the siege, the losses
were greater than the combined losses of
the Romanian armies in fighting for their
own lands, and the siege turned out to be
the bloodiest to date among various sieges
of World War II. Comparatively, the Soviet
side reported slightly over 41,000 casualties,
and the Soviet navy managed to evacuate
350,000 soldiers and civilians from the city.
The siege raised domestic concerns over
Romanian participation in Eastern Front
campaigns, partially because the lost territories had already been regained and partially
because Romanian losses seemed to be
much greater than those sustained by their
neighbors like Hungary. Antonescu could
no longer claim that this was a war of liberation for Romanians. The Soviets, on the
other hand, greatly exaggerated their ability
to resist and fight with determination and
used the battle for Odessa as part of its
wider propaganda campaign. The female
Soviet sniper Vera Pavlichenko became a
widely publicized hero with 180 kills at
Odessa, and the city later became one of 15
places to be awarded a Hero City status
by the Soviet government for its fierce resistance to the adversary forces.
Following its occupation in October 1941,
Odessa became the capital of the Romanian
Transnistria Governorate during World War
II and witnessed numerous massacres, including the infamous 1941 Odessa massacre. But
some historians argue that the conditions of
the local population improved in two subsequent years, until the occupation of Odessa
was abandoned in the spring of 1944.
Irina Mukhina
See also: Antonescu, Ion (18821946); Carol
II, King of Romania (18931953); Romania
in World War II

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Ottoman Counterinsurgency Operations in the Balkans and Crete

Further Reading
Axworthy, Mark, Cornel Scafes, and Christian
Craciunoiu. Third Axis, Fourth Ally: Romanian Armed Forces in the European War,
19391945. London: Arms and Armour,
1995.
Dallin, Alexander. Odessa, 19411944: A
Case Study of Soviet Territory under Foreign Rule. Oxford: Oxford University
Press, 1998.
Filipescu, Mihai T. The Reluctant Axis: The
Romanian Army in Russia, 19411944.
Privately published, 2006.
Stahel, David. Kiev 1941: Hitlers Battle
for Supremacy in the East. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 2012.

Ottoman Counterinsurgency
Operations in the Balkans
and Crete
From its foundation back in the fourteenth
century, the Ottoman military had been
tasked to provide internal security and public order. The establishment of the Zabtiye
(later Jandarma [gendarmerie]) organization
modeled after Prussian and French examples
in 1840 did lessen the burden on the military
by taking over ordinary law enforcement
duties. The breaking away of an independent Greece in 1829 started a process that
the Ottoman administration had little understanding of or the means to counter. The
Ottoman administration saw the threat from
a traditional perspective and employed traditional methods such as negotiation with traditional local leaders, trying to crush
rebellions with military power only.
After the success of the first wave of separatist nationalism, the empire had to face a
second wave. The Berlin Peace Treaty recast
the Ottoman Balkan possessions in such
a way that it was not militarily feasible
to defend them against either foreign

aggression or internal insurrection. Except


for Romania, all of the newly independent
Balkan nations had significant national
minorities left within the Ottoman provinces
and irredentist plans were quickly hatched to
create larger Christian states by swallowing
large portions of Ottoman territory. Abdulhamid (18421918) and his advisers were
unable to create an effective and viable strategy to deal with this second wave of separatism. The counterinsurgency campaigns
against separatist nationalist movements
were left entirely in the hands of regimentand battalion-level junior officers, who
were on their own without any clear orders
and without the cooperation of other
government agencies.
Beginning in 1841, turmoil began in Crete
with the arrival of instigators from Greece.
An Ottoman expeditionary force under the
command of Mustafa Naili Pasha (1798
1871), a native Cretan, suppressed the rebellion. The negotiation process and further
Ottoman reforms did not satisfy the Greek
nationalists, and a well-organized rebellion
broke out in 1866. This time the insurgents
were well organized and able to mobilize
12,000 personnel. The veteran Ismail Pasha
(18301895) was assigned once again as
the governor and the commander of an
expeditionary force of 45,000 men. The
insurgency continued on for nearly four
years and terminated only after the successful application of counterinsurgency tactics
and techniques combined with what might
be called today Mustafa Naili Pashas
hearts and minds campaign. However,
low-level insurgency continued on nonstop
on the island, with periodic large-scale
rebellions in 1878, 1888, and 1896.
In comparison to Crete where there was
only one insurgency group, which was relatively easy to isolate, the Ottoman Balkans,
especially Macedonia, were most difficult

Ottoman Counterinsurgency Operations in the Balkans and Crete

to control and govern. There were four states


and four major insurgent nationalist organizations that were vying for portions of it.
Additionally, the population was far more
cosmopolitan and settlements more mixed.
At the same time, the irredentist desires of
all four states overlapped each other so much
that most often the insurgent organizations
were fighting each other as they were fighting
against the Ottoman military. The introduction of Italian anarchism and Russian nihilism
further radicalized the separatist nationalist
groups. The Macedonian insurgent organization especially, which carried the title of
Inner Macedonian Revolutionary Organization (IMRO, or VMRO), managed to blend
militant nationalist ideology with insurgency
tactics and techniques so effectively that it
could be called the first modern guerrilla
organization.
The Komitacs waged relentless terror
campaigns including murder, robbery, extortion, kidnapping, and occasionally massacre
not only against the state and its functionaries but also against Muslim and Christian
populations as well, and sometimes even
against their own supporters. For them, terrorism and employing all sorts of violence
was a proper tool to gain the support of the
population and most importantly to capture
European attention and encourage the intervention of the Great Powers. Komitacs, as
the first modern guerrillas, made effective
use of the military potential of the civilian
population. The population provided them
with sanctuary, food, intelligence, funding,
and recruits. The Komitacs had support
bases in neighboring Christian countries
and most often had the direct support of the
host countrys armed forces in terms of
expertise, weapons, and sometimes personnel. Their organizational structures combined the Italian Carbonari cell system with
the Russian nihilist dual political front and

armed wing structure. So most often, village


notables, teachers, and clergy belonged to
the political front, whereas youngsters
indoctrinated by them were guerrilla fighters. Of course, not all the Komitac organizations were on an equal footing. The
IMRO was the most modern and complex
organization, whereas the Greek ones were
more traditional and less sophisticated.
The Ottoman officers had to learn how to
conduct counterinsurgency operations
against these guerrilla organizations by
themselves under very adverse conditions.
Most of the academy-graduated officers
had to spend several rotations and sometimes whole careers in Macedonia fighting
against these ideologically motivated, wellequipped, and well-led guerrilla organizations on their own. Their main problem was
the lack of government support as well as a
lack of doctrinal tactics to combat these
unconventional fighters. The administration
was more than happy to leave everything to
the officers on the scene without providing
substantial support unless the situation
became completely unmanageable. This
was also true for the wider Ottoman public
in that ordinary citizens paid limited attention to the problem even in neighboring
provinces like Salonika. In a relatively
short time, they understood the importance
of support by the population and made use
of not only the potential of the Muslim population, but also the different Christian
groups against each other. For example,
Greeks were valuable allies in predominantly Macedonian or Bulgarian regions,
whereas Bulgarians were Ottoman allies in
Greek-dominated areas.
Thanks to the administrations efforts to
isolate conflict zones from the wider public
and because of its distancing itself from
insurgency-related problems, the officer
corps, in a unique blend of initiative, gained

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Ottoman Empire

control of the conflict zones. Consequently,


various tactics and techniques were invented,
and more or less an unofficial but widely
accepted uniform counterinsurgency doctrine
was in use after the 1890s. These unofficial
counterinsurgency strategies, tactics, and
techniques eventually paid off, and most of
the Komitac groups were crushed and lost
ground after the failed Ilinden rebellion
(August 2September 8, 1903). As can be
expected, this rare blend of freedom and conflict affected the political understanding and
consciousness of the Mektebli officers. The
Mekteblis saw themselves as the new elite of
the empire, and they felt responsible to act in
its interest. The constant conflict created
channels of information between combatants.
The militant nationalism of the guerrillas, the
continuous flow of political thoughts, and
their way of propaganda and organization
greatly inspired the officers. And in the end,
they applied what they had learned.
Mesut Uyar
See also: Bulgarian Horrors, 1876; Ilinden
Uprising, 1903; Macedonia

Further Reading
Adanr, Fikret. Die Makedonische Frage: Ihre
Entstehung und Entwicklung bis 1908.
Wiesbaden: Steiner Verlag, 1979.
Perry, Duncan M. The Politics of Terror: The
Macedonian Liberation Movements, 1893
1903. Durham, NC: Duke University
Press, 1988.
Sensk, Pnar. The Transformation of Ottoman
Crete: Revolts, Politics and Identity in the
Late Nineteenth Century. London: I. B.
Tauris, 2011.

Ottoman Empire
The Ottoman dynasty was first established
in the thirteenth century in Central Asia in
what is today the nation of Turkey. The

Ottoman Empire itself emerged in the


fifteenth century, when the Ottomans
conquered the eastern territories of the
Byzantine Empire. It then expanded to take
in Byzantine lands in western Turkey and
southeastern Europe.
Unlike most imperial powers, the
Ottoman Empire was ruled by one family
for seven centuries. Osman I was the first
of over 30 members of the Ottoman dynasty
to reign. Ottoman rule spanned the thirteenth to twentieth centuries, and the
dynasty showed tremendous resiliency over
the course of those centuries; it achieved
vast expansion and never succumbed to foreign domination or internal threats.
In 1453, the Ottomans conquered Constantinople, the capital of the Byzantine
Empire. The previously impenetrable
Byzantine Empire had become increasingly
weak as the aggressive Mongols repeatedly
attacked it. Additionally, the Byzantines
lacked the kind of powerful dynastic family
the Ottomans enjoyed, and consequently,
the capital fell fairly easily to the Turks.
Led by Mehmet II, the Ottomans renamed
Constantinople to Istanbul, and then they
worked to rebuild the devastated city.
The Ottoman Empire reached its peak of
power, wealth, and influence under the
reign of Sultan Suleiman I. Suleiman
reigned from 1520 to 1566, and under his
leadership, the empire became the most
powerful force in the world. Known for his
military prowess, he doubled the size of the
empire and oversaw its expansion throughout the Balkans and Hungary and as far
west as Vienna. He also oversaw an increase
in the educational system, the development
of the empires infrastructure, and the dominance of Islam throughout the empire. The
period of Suleimans reign is commonly
seen as a renaissance of Ottoman culture
and society. However, that period of

Ottoman Empire in the Balkan Wars

expansion and rejuvenation ended with his


death in 1566.
Four years after Suleimans death, his
successor, Selim II, invaded the island of
Cyprus, sacked the capital of Nicosia, and
slaughtered 30,000 Cypriots. European
powers, long worried about the increasing
aggressiveness of the Ottomans, were
alarmed and frightened by that massacre
and resolved to bring the Ottoman Empires
expansion under control. They found some
success in that pursuit, primarily in the
1571 Battle of Lepanto, which dealt a devastating blow to Ottoman naval power.
However, the empire persisted for another
three and a half centuries, albeit with less
prestige and strength. The Ottomans became
known as ruthless and often cruel conquerors. They imposed crippling taxation on
those they conquered. In Greece, they took
male children to work for the dynastic family and young girls to work in the sultans
harem. Those and other misdeeds led to
rebellions throughout the empire. During
the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries
especially, opposition to Ottoman rule
spread throughout the empire, and along
with poor administration, it contributed to a
fundamental weakening of the control held
by the Turks throughout the lands they had
appropriated.
Perhaps the darkest period of the Ottoman
Empire occurred from 1890 to 1915, when
the Turks slaughtered more than 1 million
Armenians in what came to be known as
the Armenian Genocide. Unlike the slaughter of the Jews during the Holocaust several
decades later, the Armenian Genocide went
largely unnoticed and unremembered. The
Turkish government has continued to deny
that it occurred at all.
World War I completed the destruction of
the Ottoman Empire. After Turkey fought
on the losing side of that war, the Ottoman

Empire was disbanded, and in 1923, Turkey


became a republic. What remains of the
Ottoman Empire, however, is incredible
architecture, particularly mosques; the
prevalence of Islam throughout Asia and
central and Eastern Europe; and a legacy of
ethnic and religious conflict throughout the
areas that were formerly part of the empire.
Maeve Cowan
See also: Ottoman Counterinsurgency Operations in the Balkans and Crete; Ottoman
Empire in the Balkan Wars; Ottoman Empire
in World War I

Further Reading
Ghazarian, Vatche, ed. Armenians in the Ottoman Empire: An Anthology of Transformation, 13th19th Centuries. Waltham, MA:
Mayreni Publishing, 1998.
Goodwin, Jason. Lords of the Horizons: A History of the Ottoman Empire. New York: H.
Holt, 1999.
Inalcik, Halil, ed. An Economic and Social
History of the Ottoman Empire: 1300
1914. New York: Cambridge University
Press, 1994.

Ottoman Empire in the Balkan


Wars
In the First Balkan War of 19121913, a
loose coalition of the Balkan Christian
statesBulgaria, Greece, Montenegro, and
Serbiafought against the Ottoman Empire
with the objective of eliminating the fivecentury-long Ottoman rule in southeastern
Europe and replacing it with nationalist
states. In the Second Balkan War of 1913,
the Ottomans were able to recover a small
portion of the territory they lost in the First
Balkan War.
Since the end of the seventeenth century,
the predations of Austria and Russia had
weakened Ottoman rule in southeastern

215

216

Ottoman Empire in the Balkan Wars

Ottoman soldiers at Salonika, 19121913. The Balkan Wars pitted Bulgaria, Greece,
Montenegro, and Serbia against the Ottoman Empire in 1912, and then against each other
in 1913. (Library of Congress)

Europe. The importation of the ideas of


western European nationalism into
southeastern Europe at the end of the eighteenth century and the beginning of the
nineteenth century further undermined
Ottoman control of this region. The Ottoman government in Constantinople failed
to meet these challenges effectively during
the nineteenth century. During the summer
of 1908, however, a group of reformers
from the Committee for Union and Progress,
known as the Young Turks, seized control of
the Ottoman Empire. They immediately
announced a program of civil and military
reforms intended to maintain the integrity
of the empire. The possibility of viable reform in the Ottoman Empire caused alarm
among those who maintained designs on its
territories. On October 7, 1908, the AustroHungarians announced the formal annexation of Bosnia-Herzegovina, an Ottoman
territory they had occupied since 1878. In
the spring of 1910, the Albanians, hitherto

fore one of the few remaining pillars of support for Ottoman rule in the Balkans, revolted
against the Young Turk reforms. Then on
September 29, 1911, the Italians declared
war with the intention of taking Ottoman
North Africa. Finally, in the fall of 1911, the
Bulgarians and the Serbs began talks in
order to form an anti-Ottoman alliance.
The Bulgarians and Serbs signed their
agreement on March 13, 1912. During the
spring and summer of 1912, Greece and
Montenegro joined the anti-Ottoman coalition. This surrounded Ottoman territories in
southeastern Europe with hostile forces.
Ironically, by this time, the Young Turk
government had fallen in Constantinople.
As the threat of war in the Balkans loomed,
the Ottoman government rushed to end
the war with Italy, signing the Treaty of
Ouchy on October 15, 1912. By then, fighting in the Balkans had already begun. On
October 8, the tiny kingdom of Montenegro
initiated hostilities. Ten days later, the

Ottoman Empire in the Balkan Wars

Ottomans declared war on Montenegros


three Balkan allies.
At the onset of the war, the Ottoman
forces were in a poor strategic position.
Many Ottoman soldiers remained in North
Africa awaiting repatriation after the Italian
War. Others were in remote Yemen fighting
an interminable insurgency. Nazim Pasha
(18481913) had overall command of the
Ottoman forces. The largest group of the
Ottoman army in Europe was the Eastern
(Thracian) army, which consisted of four
corps under the command of Ferik Abdullah
Pasha (18461937). It faced the Bulgarian
army, the largest in the Balkan alliance.
The Western (Vardar) army had three corps.

It had the impossible task of defending


Albania, Kosovo, and Macedonia against
the combined armies of Greece, Montenegro, and Serbia.
At the beginning of the war, the Ottomans
initiated an offensive in Thrace. They hoped
to pin the Bulgarians against their main
position in Thrace, the fortress city of Adrianople (Edirne, Odrin). They soon found
themselves in retreat. The Ottoman concentration of forces around their other Thracian
fortress at Kirkkilise (Lozengrad) failed to
stop the Bulgarian advance. While the Bulgarian Second Army surrounded Adrianople, the Bulgarian First and Third Armies
pursued the retreating Ottomans and

217

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Ottoman Empire in the Balkan Wars

inflicted another defeat on the Ottomans


along a line from Lule Burgaz to Pinarhisar
(Lyule Burgas to Buni Hisar) in central
Thrace on October 2930. The Ottomans
retreated in disarray to the C
atalca lines.
This was the final Ottoman defensive
position before Constantinople. There on
November 1718, the Bulgarians attacked.
The Ottoman army, with some assistance
from the Ottoman navy firing at the Bulgarians from the Sea of Marmara and the
Black Sea, rallied to hold the Catalca lines.
This was the first Ottoman victory in the
Balkan Wars. To some degree, it restored
Ottoman confidence.
Meanwhile in the Western Theater, the
Vardar Army, led by Zeki Pasha (1862
1943), suffered a series of defeats against
the Greeks and Serbs. The bulk of the
Ottoman forces rushed into northern
Macedonia to meet the oncoming Serbs.
They suffered a rout at Kumanovo on October 23. The Serbs then pushed them further
south after engagements at Prilep and Bitola.
At the same time, the Greek army advanced
to Salonika, entering the city on November 7,
a day ahead of the Bulgarians. The Ottomanfortified towns of Janina in southern Albania
and Scutari in northern Albania defied the
Greek and Montenegrin armies, respectively,
undoubtedly with the support of most of
their populations.
After the defeat of both of its European
armies, the Ottoman government requested
an armistice on November 12. The Bulgarians agreed only after the failure of their
assault on the C
atalca positions. When the
talks began at C atalca on November 26,
Ottoman control of Europe was limited to
the three besieged fortresses of Adrianople,
Janina, and Scutari; the Gallipoli Peninsula;
and the territory behind the Catalca lines.
Remnants of the Vardar Army also remained
active in central Albania. The armistice was

signed on December 3. Negotiations for


peace then shifted to London. Nazim
Pasha, the Ottoman commander, was the
chief Ottoman delegate at the London
Peace talks.
At London on January 1, 1913, the
Ottomans proposed terms for peace. They
accepted the loss of all their European possessions west of the vilayet (province) of
Adrianople (Thrace), but they refused to
concede Thrace or the Aegean islands.
Although this was a reasonable offer, neither
the Bulgarians nor the Greeks accepted it.
The Bulgarians wanted Adrianople, and the
Greeks wanted the islands. The talks stalled.
On January 22, the Young Turks, led by
Enver Bey (18811922), again seized
power in Constantinople. Upon their takeover, they shot the failed Ottoman commander Nazim Pasha. The Young Turks
opposed the surrender of Adrianople. In an
effort to end the war, however, they offered
to cede the part of the city on the right
bank of the Maritsa River and conceded the
disposition of the Aegean Islands to the
Great Powers. The Bulgarians unwisely
rejected this offer. Because of the stalemate in London, the armistice ended on
January 30, 1913.
The Ottomans renewed their military
efforts with a well-conceived but poorly
executed attempt to relieve Adrianople. On
February 7, the army launched an attack
from Bulair, the Ottoman position at
Gallipoli, coordinated with a landing at
Sharkoi on the Sea of Marmara. This offensive was intended to catch the Bulgarians
by surprise. These simultaneous attacks
failed. Nevertheless, they demonstrated that
the Ottoman forces had regained a certain
degree of self-confidence after the disasters
of the previous autumn. Ultimately the
Young Turks attempts to reinvigorate the
Ottoman war effort did not succeed. Janina

Ottoman Empire in the Balkan Wars

surrendered to the Greeks on March 6,


Adrianople fell to the Bulgarians on
March 26, and Scutari opened to the Montenegrins on April 24.
Their efforts during the renewed fighting
had exhausted the Ottomans. On April 7,
1913, even before the fall of Scutari, they
proposed a resumption of the armistice.
The Bulgarians and Ottomans renewed the
armistice at C
atalca on April 15. The other
Balkan allies were not involved.
Peace negotiations then resumed in London. The Ottomans signed the Treaty of
London on May 30, 1913. With this treaty,
they ceded all of their European possessions
west of a straight line from Enez (Enos) on
the Aegean Sea to Midye (Midia) on the
Black Sea. They also surrendered claims to
Crete and the Aegean Islands except for
Tendos and Imbros, which the Ottomans
retained to defend the Straits. Over
500 years of Ottoman rule in Europe had
apparently come to an end.
The Balkan alliance soon collapsed
because of a dispute between Bulgaria on
one hand, and Greece and Serbia on the
other, over the division of Macedonia. Fighting erupted on the night of 29-30 June 29
30 when the Bulgarian army attacked
Greek and Serbian positions in Macedonia.
With the Bulgarian army heavily engaged
throughout Macedonia, the Young Turk
government in Constantinople seized the
opportunity to recover some of the territory
surrendered in London. It especially wanted
Adrianople, the first Ottoman capital in
Europe. On July 12, Enver (now Pasha)
ordered the Catalca Army and the Gallipoli
Army to advance toward the Enez-Midye
line. On July 22, the combined armies
entered Adrianople, encountering no
opposition. The small Bulgarian garrison
had evacuated the previous day. Some Ottoman units moved further west and briefly

crossed the prewar Bulgarian frontier. Due


to fears of Great Power intervention, however, they did not proceed far into Bulgaria.
With the Treaty of Constantinople, signed
between Bulgaria and the Ottoman Empire
on September 30, 1913, the Ottomans recovered most of Thrace, including Adrianople.
The Treaty of Athens, signed on November 14, ended the war with Greece. Finally,
the Ottomans and Serbs confirmed the
Treaty of London with the Treaty of Constantinople, signed on March 14, 1914.
The Balkan Wars were a disaster for the
Ottoman Empire. The Ottomans lost extensive European territories including the
Aegean Islands, Albania, Crete, Kosovo,
and Macedonia. In the First Balkan War,
the Ottomans sustained 340,000 casualties,
including at least 50,000 dead. In the Second
Balkan War, the army had no combat casualties, but some 4,000 soldiers died of disease. The number of pro-Ottoman civilians
living in Europe, mainly Muslims, who
died in the Balkan Wars is unknown, but
must be significant.
Nevertheless, the Balkan Wars did have
some positive consequences for the Ottoman
Empire. The experiences and losses of the
Balkan Wars provided the Ottoman army
with knowledge that led to some success in
World War I. They also provided a basis for
the establishment of a new political entity
based upon a Turkish identity in place of an
Ottoman identity in southeastern Europe
and Anatolia.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Adrianople, Siege of, 19121913;
Balkan War, First, 19121913; Balkan War,
Second, 1913; Balkan Wars, 19121913,
Causes; Balkan Wars, 19121913, Consequences; Chataldzha, Battle of, 1912; Constantinople, Treaty of, 1913; Janina, Siege of,
19121913; Kumanovo, Battle of, 1912;
London, Treaty of, 1913; Lyule BurgasBuni

219

220

Ottoman Empire in World War I


Hisar, Battle of, 1912; Scutari, Siege of, 1912
1913

Further Reading
Erickson, Edward J. Defeat in Detail: The
Ottoman Army in the Balkans, 19121913.
Westport, CT: Praeger, 2003.
Hall, Richard C. The Balkan Wars, 1912
1913: Prelude to the First World War.
London: Routledge, 2000.
Shaw, Stanford J., and Ezel Kural Shaw. History of the Ottoman Empire and Modern
Turkey. Vol. 2, Reform, Revolution and
Republic: The Rise of Modern Turkey,
18081975. Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 1977.

Ottoman Empire in World War I


In terms of troop strength, the Ottoman
Empire (Turkey) did not rank among the
major belligerents of World War I. It mobilized about 2.8 million men, even fewer
than the United States. In relation to its prewar population of 22 million, however, Turkey raised more men than Russia, and its
recruitment ratio of about 13 percent ranked
sixth among the major participating nations
of the war. The sheer size of the Ottoman
Empire, extending as it did from Thrace to
the Persian Gulf and from Caucasia to the
Suez Canal, ensured it an important role in
the war. Turkey fought on five fronts and
sent troops to three more to aid its allies.
The Ottoman Empire entered the war with
an army that had been badly mauled in the
Balkan Wars of 19121913. Eight of its 36
peacetime divisions were undergoing major
reorganization in 1914, and 14 were being
rebuilt from scratch after having been
largely destroyed. Moreover, a purge conducted in 19131914 rid the army of 1,300
older officers who were considered to be a
liability; however, as a result, in 1914,

brigadier generals were often found in


charge of corps and colonels commanded
divisions, a situation that frequently caused
problems over the course of the war.
Following decades of German military
assistance, Turkeys army in 1914 was
closely modeled after that of Germany,
with a General Staff as core organization
and pool for highly trained general officers.
The recruitment system, mobilization procedures, and order of battle also copied the
German model. On the other hand, Turkey
was largely lacking the material prerequisites for fighting a modern war. As the least
industrialized European power, Turkey
could not provide its army with modern
armaments in sizable quantities and entered
the war desperately short of field guns,
machine guns, and ammunition. Turkish
supply and medical services were woefully
inadequate, and motorcars and aircraft were
almost completely absent. The Ottoman
road and railroad network was pitiful, and
moving a division from Thrace to the East
could take months.
Considering these shortcomings, the
fighting performance of the Turkish soldier
was truly astonishing. Poorly clad and
ill-fed, Turkish soldiers for the most part
endured terrible hardships, marched enormous distances, and fought in the most hostile environments. Turning the Turkish
soldier from his defensive positions required
massive material and manpower superiority.
Significantly, even in defeat, the Ottoman
army never experienced large-scale mutinies
among the rank and file. Desertion, however,
became an increasing problem late in
the war.
In 1914, Turkey mobilized 40 regular
army divisions that initially formed 13
corps, grouped into four field armies. Corps
were composed of three infantry divisions,
one artillery regiment, and one cavalry

Ottoman Empire in World War I

regiment; divisions had three infantry regiments and one artillery regiment. In addition, there were regular and irregular
cavalry regiments partially formed into
(reserve) cavalry divisions. There was also
the 40,000-strong Jandarma, a paramilitary
police force that formed mobile regiments.
Designated for rear-area duties, it occasionally served in the front line.
The authorized Turkish army organization increasingly came apart during the war
when new field armies were added, foughtout divisions were replaced, depleted formations were consolidated, and ad hoc detachments were created. In November 1918,
eight field armies commanded a force of
only 25 divisions, almost none of which
had been active in 1914.
While the only war plan available in 1914
called for a cordon-style defense of the
empire and deployed more than half of the
army around Constantinople, in fact Turkey
began offensive operations almost from the
outset. This was in part to fulfill its obligations to its allies and in part to regain
territory lost in recent wars. Minister of
War Enver Pasha, however, frequently
implemented ever more fantastic offensive
schemes that were beyond the operational
capabilities of the army and necessitated
permanent redeployments, which further
wore down the troops. In order to underpin
Turkeys standing as a major European
power, Enver even sent sizable reinforcements to its European allies that fought
with distinction in Romania, Galicia, and
Macedonia.
While the potentially most dangerous
front for Turkey in any war was Thrace,
where the frontier was less than 180 miles
from the national capital, its major military
effort was in Caucasia. Here, the illequipped Third Army engaged in a winter
offensive in late 1914. After some initial

success, it was badly mauled by a Russian


counteroffensive. Rebuilt in the spring of
1915, it was almost destroyed in the Russian
Erzurum offensive early in 1916. Later in
the same year, the Second Army, composed
almost entirely of Gallipoli veterans, was
nearly destroyed in an offensive farther
south in the Caucasus. After that, the war in
the East ground to a halt. In 1918, however,
after the Russian Revolution had resulted in
a withdrawal from Caucasia, the Third
Army went over to the offensive and penetrated deep into Armenia and Azerbaijan
in an effort to incite a Pan-Turanic nationalist movement in central Asia.
In European Turkey, the First and Fifth
Armies under the able leadership of German
general Otto Liman von Sanders (1855
1929) turned back the Entente Gallipoli
landing with heavy losses in 1915. Thereafter, however, these two veteran armies
were abused as a readily available manpower reserve for other fronts. When the
Allies broke out from Salonika in 1918,
there was nothing left to prevent them from
entering Constantinople.
In Palestine, a coup de main aimed at
seizing the Suez Canal in 1914 proved abortive. Afterward, the Sinai-Palestinian Front
evolved into a state of protracted, indecisive
warfare, aggravated by the rising Arab
Revolt. During 19161917, a British buildup
in this theater progressed, and in 1918, the
German-Turkish Yldrm (thunderbolt)
army group finally collapsed under repeated
attacks, and British forces seized Jerusalem
and Damascus.
In Mesopotamia (Iraq), an Anglo-Indian
invasion resulted in Turkish triumph in
April 1916 when Major General Charles
Townshend (18611924) surrendered an
entire division to the Ottoman Sixth Army
at Kut. Thereafter, this theater of war
remained more or less quiet until the British

221

222

Ottoman Empire in World War I

renewed their advance in 1918. Several


Turkish invasions of Persia secured a temporary foothold in this virtual strategic vacuum
but on the whole proved insignificant.
On October 30, 1918, the Ottoman
Empire signed an armistice with the Entente
on board the British battleship Agamemnon
off the island of Mudros, ending Turkeys
participation in the war. According to recent
estimates, Turkey lost 770,000 dead and
760,000 wounded in the war, each an astonishing 27 percent of the mobilized total, and
about 145,000 captured.
Dierk Walter
See also: Gallipoli, 1915; Kemal, Mustafa
(18811938)

Further Reading
Emin, Ahmed. Turkey in the World War. New
Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1930.

Erickson, Edward J. Ordered to Die: A History


of the Ottoman Army in the First World
War. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press,
2000.
Fewster, Kevin, Hatice Basarin, and Vesihi
Basarin. Gallipoli: The Turkish Story. London: Allen and Unwin, 2004.
Lewis, Bernard. The Emergence of Modern
Turkey. 3rd ed. New York: Oxford University Press, 2002.
Shaw, Stanford J., and Ezel Kural Shaw. History of the Ottoman Empire and Modern
Turkey. Vol. 2, Reform, Revolution, and
Republic: The Rise of Modern Turkey,
18081975. Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 1977.
Turfan, M. Naim. The Rise of the Young Turks:
Politics, the Military and Ottoman
Collapse. New York: Tauris, 2000.

P
Papandreou, George
(18881968)

Securing a narrow victory in the elections


of November 1963 over Konstantinos
Karamanliss National Radical Union,
Papandreou was appointed prime minister
but immediately resigned in an attempt to
achieve an absolute majority in the elections
of February 1964. He won these elections
with an unprecedented 53 percent of the
vote and was appointed prime minister.
In 1965, he managed to survive an internal
crisis that saw his son Andreas Papandreou
(19191996), a member of his cabinet,
accused of belonging to the left-wing
organization Aspida. In July 1965, King
Constantine II (1940) dismissed Papandreou as prime minister over clashes regarding control of the Ministry of Defense.
In 1967, a group of young officers, in a
coup that came to be known as the Revolution of April 21, 1967, overthrew the
government. Papandreou was held under
house arrest until his death on November 1,
1968, in Athens.
Lucian N. Leustean

Greek politician and prime minister (1944,


1963, 19641967) George Papandreou was
born in Kalentzi, Achaia, Greece, on February 13, 1888. He graduated from the Law
Faculty of the University of Athens in 1911
and briefly pursued postgraduate studies in
Germany. He became one of the closest
supporters of Prime Minister Eleuthe rios
Venizelos (18641936), who appointed him
governor of the Aegean Islands during
19171920. Papandreou was elected to
Parliament in 1923 and held various ministerial positions during 19241935. After
abandoning the Liberal Party, he founded
his own small Republican Socialist Party in
1935. He was exiled in 1936 during the
dictatorship of Ioannis Metaxas and
was imprisoned by the Germans during
19421944.
After his escape, Papandreou joined the
royalist government and was appointed
prime minister in exile in April 1944. He
returned to Athens on October 18, 1944,
after the German departure. In December 1944, at the beginning of the Greek Civil
War, he resigned and was replaced by General
Nikolaos Plastiras (18831953). During
19461952, Papandreou held ministerial positions in several governments. In 1950, he
founded the George Papandreou Party, and
after joint leadership of the Liberal Party in
the late 1950s, he organized a new centerleftist coalition, the Center Union, in 1961.

See also: Greek Civil War; Venizelos, Eleutherios (18641936)

Further Reading
Campbell, John, and Philip Sherrard. Modern
Greece. New York: Praeger, 1968.
Clogg, Richard. A Concise History of Greece.
2nd ed. Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 2002.
Close, David H. Greece since 1945: Politics,
Economy and Society. Edinburgh: Pearson
Education, 2002.

223

224

Partisans, Albania

Partisans, Albania
The Partisans, more officially the National
Liberation Movement, were the Communistled resistance organization in Albania during
World War II. Before World War II, the
Communists never attracted much interest in
Albania. They lacked adherents and overall
structure. The few Albanian Communists
offered no opposition to the Italian occupation
in 1939.
After the German attack on Soviet Russia
in June 1941, the leader of the Yugoslav
Communists, Josip Broz Tito (18921980)
sent agents into Albania to organize resistance there. This was intended to compliment the Partisan resistance to foreign
occupation and domestic enemies in Yugoslavia. The Yugoslav agents managed to
organize the Albanian Communists. They
recruited new members. On November 8,
1941, the Communist Party formally came
into existence. The Yugoslavs appointed
Enver Hoxha (19081985), a teacher who
had studied in Belgium and France, to head
the new party. By the spring of 1942, small
Partisan bands formed to undertake sporadic
attacks on the Italian occupiers and their
Albanian collaborators. The Albanian
Partisans found an able commander in
Mehmet Shehu (19131981), a veteran of
the International Brigades fighting in the
Spanish Civil War.
Two issues caused the Albanian Partisans
to adopt a more aggressive profile in 1943.
One was the emergence of the nationalist
Albanian resistance movement, the Balli
Kombetar (BK). The BK represented a challenge to the Communists over the direction
of resistance. A meeting between members
of the two groups at Mukaj in August 1943
foundered on the question of Kosovo. The
Communists looked to resolve this issue

with Tito after the war, while the BK


insisted that Kosovo be recognized as a part
of the Albanian state.
The other was the withdrawal of Italy
from the war on September 8, 1943. In the
spring of 1943, the Albanian Communists
decided to establish an Albanian National
Liberation Army (ANLA) modeled on
Titos forces. A prominent figure in Titos
movement, Svetozar Vukmanovic (1912
2000), known as Tempo, arrived from
Macedonia to direct the Albanian Communist military efforts. After the Italian surrender, the Partisans were able to acquire large
quantities of Italian arms. Also following
the example of the Yugoslav Communists
at Bihac the previous year, the Communists
convened a national liberation council at
Peza near Tirana on September 16, 1943.
Communist and non-Communist delegates
met there to establish a broad front for resistance against the Germans, who had taken
over from the Italians.
By the time of the German occupation,
the ANLA and the BK begun to fight each
other in a civil war not unlike that between
the C etniks and Partisans in Yugoslavia.
Beginning in the spring of 1943, the British
sent aid and liaison officers to Albania.
After the spring of 1944, they focused only
on the ANLA. This helped them in their
struggles against both the Germans and the
BK. The BK increasingly compromised
themselves by cooperation with the Germans. When the Germans withdrew from
Albania in October 1944, the ANLA
attacked their rear guard in Tirana. The
ensuing battle of Tirana lasted from October 25 until November 17, 1944. With liberation of Tirana, the ANLA had defeated
both its foreign and domestic enemies. This
left the Communists in control of Albania.
Richard C. Hall

Partisans, Bulgaria
See also: Albania in World War II; Balli Kombetar; Hoxha, Enver (19081985); Partisans,
Yugoslavia; Tito, Josip Broz (18921980)

Further Reading
Fischer, Bernd. Albania at War 19391945.
West Lafayette, IN: Purdue University
Press, 1999.
Jelavich, Barbara. History of the Balkans.
Vol. 2, Twentieth Century. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 1983.
Vickers, Miranda. The Albanians, a Modern
History. London: I. B. Tauris, 1995.

Partisans, Bulgaria
The World War II Partisan movement in Bulgaria was slow to appear. As in Albania and
Yugoslavia, Communists led the Partisan
movement and provided most of the active
fighters. The Nazi-Soviet Pact deprived
Communists everywhere of motivation to act
against the Soviet ally. Only after the German
invasion of the Soviet Union on June 22,
1941, did the Bulgarian Communist
Party (BCP) take steps to oppose the Sofia
government at its German ally.
The Bulgarian Partisans faced significant
obstacles. Economic cooperation with Nazi
Germany had benefited Bulgarias largely
agricultural economy. Bulgarias bloodless
occupation of Greek and Yugoslav Macedonia in April 1941 was very popular throughout the country. The Sofia government
wisely refrained from participating in the
Nazi campaign against the Soviet Union.
After their war began, the Soviets made
some attempt to support the Bulgarian Partisans by sending agents into the country by
parachute and submarine, but had little success in the remainder of 1941 and through
1942. The German defeat at Stalingrad
revived the Bulgarian Partisan movement.
The prospect of a Soviet victory grew

throughout 1943. So did the ranks of the


Bulgarian Partisans. There were few
obvious targets. Much of the Bulgarian
army was deployed in the occupied Greek
and Yugoslav territories. Few German
troops were stationed in Bulgaria. The Partisans mainly sabotaged economic targets and
attacked police stations. They also assassinated some political and police officials.
A determined effort by the police during
the winter of 19431944 inflicted severe
losses on the small Partisan bands. During
the spring of 1944, however, as Soviet
troops swept across southern Ukraine and
neared the Balkans, Bulgarian Partisans
attracted growing numbers of volunteers.
By this time, they also received some British
aid. Several British agents reached the
Bulgarian Partisans. At least two, Major
Mostyn Davies and Major Frank Thompson
(19201944), died fighting against Bulgarian
government forces.
By the summer of 1944, the number of
Bulgarian Partisans had grown to as many as
10,000, although the actual number may
have been fewer. With the Soviet army occupying Romania since the end of August
1944, an anti-German government came to
power in Sofia on September 2. The BCP
then, with the assistance of disgruntled army
units and partisan bands, ousted the new
government and took control on September 9
through the so called Fatherland Front.
The Bulgarian Partisans participation in the
September 9 coup was probably their most
significant contribution to the war.
After the war, the activities of the
Bulgarian Partisans compared unfavorably
with those of the Yugoslav and even the
Albanian Partisans. For that reason, the
BCP tended to exaggerate both the numbers
of Bulgarian Partisans and their activities.
Monuments to Partisan actions sprang up
throughout the country. Since the end of the

225

226

Partisans, Yugoslavia

Communist regime in 1989, such tributes


have suffered neglect.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Bulgaria in World War II; Partisans,
Albania; Partisans, Yugoslavia

Further Reading
Miller, Marshall Lee. Bulgaria during the Second World War. Stanford, CA: Stanford
University Press, 1975.
Oren, Nissan. Bulgarian Communism: The
Road to Power 19341944. New York:
Columbia University Press, 1971.
Stoimenov, Stoyan, et al. Atlas na partizanskoto dvizhenie v Bu lgariya 19411944.
Sofia: Bu lgarskata komunisticheska
partiya, 1968.

Partisans, Yugoslavia
The Yugoslav Partisans was a Communistbased resistance movement in Yugoslavia
led by Josip Broz Tito (18921980). They
were the most effective resistance force in
Europe to oppose the Germans and their
allies during World War II. They remained
active in the field during the entire war and
participated in the liberation of Yugoslavia
along with the Soviet Russian army.
The Partisans began their activities in the
immediate aftermath of the German invasion of Soviet Russia on June 22, 1941.
Although after the Yugoslav-Soviet split of
1948, the Tito government claimed that
Partisan activity began with the invasion
of Yugoslavia by Germany and its allies
on April 6, 1941, the Nazi-Soviet Pact of
August 26, 1939, initially served to constrain Communist resistance in Germanruled Europe. Tito, the leader of the
Partisans, was a real Yugoslav, with a Croatian father and a Slovene mother. He had
developed Communist sympathies as an
Austro-Hungarian prisoner of war in Russia

during the Russian Civil War. After he


returned to the new Yugoslav state, he
became a Communist Party official and
spent five years in jail because of his political activity.
Tito organized the initial Partisan
response to the foreign occupation. In their
first real action, the Partisans joined in the
spontaneous uprising in Montenegro
in July 1941. Initially they cooperated
with the other main resistance force in
Yugoslavia, the mainly Serbian nationalist
etniks. The harsh German retaliation in
C
October 1941, including the massacre of
over 4,500 Serbian men and boys at
Kraljevo and Kragujevac, convinced the
etnik leader Dragoljub Draza Mihajlovic
C
(18931946), to avoid antagonizing the
occupation armies to prevent further massacres and to preserve his forces in anticipation of an Allied landing in the Balkans
later in the war. This left the field open for
the Partisans, who saw the atrocities as
excellent motivations for recruitment.
By the beginning of 1942, the Partisans
etniks, who had
were fighting against the C
begun to obtain support from the Germans
and Italians. The Partisans also on occasion
made contact with the Germans.
The main focus of Partisan activity was in
the mountains of Bosnia. The GermanItalian occupiers had assigned Bosnia to the
new Independent State of Croatia (NDH
Nezavisna Drzava Hrvatska). Fascist Croatian troops (Ustasa) perpetrated massacres
against the Serbian populations of Croatia
and Bosnia. This helped to provide recruits
for Titos forces. The Partisans were also
active in much of Croatia and Montenegro.
Early in the war, Tito sent Partisan agents
into Italian-occupied Albania to organize
resistance there.
During the early part of the war, the
British provided support to both the

Pavelic, Ante

Partisans and Cetniks, but as the war continued and Cetnik activity against the Germans
lagged, British aid increasingly focused
solely on the Partisans. By December 1943,
the British discontinued their aid to the
Cetniks and focused their efforts exclusively
on the Partisans. This was in spite of the
fact that the Partisans made no secret of
their Communist affiliation. The Partisans
benefited from the Italian surrender in
September 1943 by seizing much of their
equipment and weapons.
The occupation forces and their allies
undertook at least seven offensive actions
directed against the Partisans. Partisan units
always managed to slip away from their
attacks and regroup. They concentrated
more on maintaining the integrity of their
forces rather than on holding territory.
Amidst the fighting, the Partisans held a
conference in Bihac , Bosnia, in November 1942 that established a so called Anti etniks,
Fascist Council. In contrast to the C
who wished to return the old regime after
the war, the Partisans advocated social revolution. They attempted to appeal to all the
national groups in Yugoslavia. They also
welcomed women into their ranks. A year
after the Bihac meeting, they established a
provisional government in Jajce, Bosnia,
etnik-backed royalist
which opposed the C
government-in-exile of King Peter II
(19231970).
By the late summer of 1944, the Romanians and Bulgarians had changed sides
after the appearance of the Soviet Russian
army on their frontiers. The Russians arrived
on the Yugoslav frontier in early October 1944. Soviet and Partisan units participated in the liberation of Belgrade on
October 20, 1944. The Russians then veered
to the north into Hungary. For the remainder
of the war, the Partisans fought against the
Germans retreating to the north, the Ustasa,

other diehard collaborationist forces,


etniks. In
and the remnants of the C
March 1945, the royalist government-inexile acknowledged the authority of the
Tito regime. After the end of the war in
May, Partisan forces near Bleiburg massacred around 70,000 members of NDH units
and other collaborationist formations who
were trying to flee into Austria.
The Partisans won the war against the
forces of the foreign occupation and against
the forces of domestic opponents. This left
Tito without political rivals at the end of
the war. It enabled him to establish his personal rule that ended only with his death in
1980. It also enabled him to withstand the
serious challenge of the Yugoslav-Soviet
split in 1948.
Richard C. Hall
See also: C etniks; Mihajlovic , Dragoljub
Draz a (18921946); Partisans, Albania;
Tito, Josip Broz (18921980); Yugoslavia,
Axis Occupation Forces in World War II;
Yugoslavia, Collaborationist Forces in World
War II

Further Reading
Autry, Phyllis. Tito: A Biography. London:
Longman, 1970.
Djilas, Milovan. Wartime. New York: Harcourt
Brace Jovanovich, 1977.
Lampe, John R. Yugoslavia as History. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996.
Roberts, Walter R. Tito, Mihailovic, and the
Allies, 19411945. New Brunswick, NJ:
Rutgers University Press, 1973.

Pavelic, Ante (18891959)


Ante Pavelic was born on July 14, 1889, in
the village of Bradina in Austrian-ruled
Bosnia-Herzegovina. Trained as a lawyer,
he became a supporter of Croatian national
rights in Austria-Hungary. In 1918, he

227

228

Pleven, Siege of, 1877

denounced Croatias incorporation into


Serb-dominated Yugoslavia, envisioning an
independent state instead. He became a
leader of the nationalistic Party of Rights
and continued advocating Croatian independence even after being elected to the Yugoslav parliament in 1927.
With the proclamation of the royal dictatorship in Yugoslavia in January 1929 and
the elimination of all nationalist political
parties, Pavelic left the country and founded,
with Italian help, the Ustas a movement,
which used terrorist acts, including the
assassination of Yugoslav king Alexander
(18881934) in 1934, to undermine Yugoslavia. Shortly after Germany invaded and
dismembered Yugoslavia in March 1941,
he returned to Croatia from Italy to become
poglavnik (leader) of the independent fascist
Croatia after more reputable Croatian politicians refused to cooperate with the invaders.
Independent Croatia was forced to give large
amounts of Dalmatian territory to Italy. As a
result, Pavelic tilted toward Nazi Germany.
A regiment of Croatian army soldiers fought
with the Germans on the Eastern Front and
was destroyed at Stalingrad. As leader of Croatia, Pavelic held almost absolute power. His
regime subjected political rivals, Serbs, and
Jews to bloody persecution. He established a
notorious concentration camp at Jasenovac.
The brutality of the regime increased the resistance of its opponents. Pavelics forces
fought the guerilla Communist-led Partisans
and the Serb-dominated Cetniks in Bosnia
and in the Krajina. This fighting caused
many casualties and much suffering. Memories of this conflict helped to fuel the bitter
fighting in these regions during the Yugoslav
Wars of 19911995.
Pavelic managed to hang on until the very
end of the war. The Ustasa regime was the
last of Hitlers allies to remain in the war.
With the collapse of Nazi Germany and

Ustasa Croatia, Pavelic fled first to Austria


on May 6, 1945, and then on to Italy. Fearing
arrest and extradition to Yugoslavia, he
moved to Argentina in 1948, where he found
refuge under the Peron regime. He took up
writing and unsuccessfully tried to maintain
control of the exile Croatian independence
movement. In spring 1957, he was severely
wounded in an assassination attempt by the
Yugoslav secret service in Buenos Aires,
only to flee Argentina at the end of the year
for Spain when Argentina agreed to extradite
him to Yugoslavia. He died from complications of the botched attack in Madrid on
December 28, 1959. Pavelics brutal rule cast
a shadow over the concept of Croatian nationalism for years after his death.
Gregory C. Ference
See also: Alexander I, King of Yugoslavia
(18881934); Cetniks; Holocaust in the Balkans; Partisans, Yugoslavia; Ustas a; Yugoslavia, Collaborationist Forces in World War II

Further Reading
Banac, Ivo. The National Question in Yugoslavia: Origins, History, Politics. Ithaca,
NY: Cornell University Press, 1984.
Shepherd, Ben. Terror in the Balkans: German
Armies and Partisan Warfare. Cambridge,
MA: Harvard University Press, 2012.
Tomasevich, Jozo. War and Revolution in
Yugoslavia, 19411945: Occupation and
Collaboration, Stanford, CA: Stanford
University Press, 2001.

Pleven, Siege of, 1877


The Russian siege of the Ottoman fortress of
Pleven (Plevna) took place in present-day
Bulgaria, July 20December 10, 1877,
during the Russo-Ottoman War, 1877
1878. The Ottoman defense slowed the
main Russian advance southward into
Bulgaria.

Ploesti, Bombing of, 19431944

In July 1877, Grand Duke Nicholas


(18311891) led the Russian army into
present-day Bulgaria and occupied the city
of Nikopol on July 16. Osman Pasha
(18321900), leading an army to reinforce
the city, then occupied Pleven about
20 miles south of Nikopol and began
reinforcing the city for an expected Russian
siege.
Russian forces, reinforced with Romanians, began the siege of Pleven on July 19.
For the next two weeks, the besieging forces
tried to break through the defenses, but the
Ottoman defenders repulsed their attacks.
By early September, the Russian-Romanian
army numbered 100,000 men, and Osman
Pasha had about 30,000 men.
A large-scale Russian-Romanian assault
on Pleven on September 11 gave the besieging force a section of the fortifications. By
October 24, the Russians and Romanians
had completely encircled the fortress.
Osman wanted to abandon the fortress, but
the Ottoman high command refused. With
supplies running low, Osmans forces, outnumbered almost five to one, tried to break
out during the night of December 9, but
failed. After he was wounded, Osman
Pasha surrendered. Although Osman was
treated honorably, thousands of Ottoman
soldiers perished in the winter snows on
their way into captivity, and the Bulgarians
massacred the wounded Ottoman soldiers
left behind in military hospitals.
The siege had held up the main Russian
advance into Bulgaria and captured the
worlds admiration, gaining the Ottomans
sympathy at the Congress of Berlin. The
fall of Pleven provided reinforcements to
the Russian army, which decisively defeated
the Ottoman army at the fourth battle of
Shipka Pass, January 59, 1878, opening
the way to Constantinople.
Robert B. Kane

See also: Russo-Ottoman War, 18771878;


San Stefano, Treaty of, 1878; Shipka Pass,
Battles of, 18771878

Further Reading
Langer, William L. European Alliances and
Alignments 18711890. 2nd ed. New York:
Alfred A. Knopf, 1950.
Shaw, Stanford J., and Ezel Kural Shaw. History of the Ottoman Empire and Modern
Turkey. Vol. 2, Reform, Reaction and
Republic: The Rise of Modern Turkey,
18081975. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1977.
Taylor, A. J. P. The Struggle for the Mastery of
Europe, 18481918. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1954.

Ploesti, Bombing of, 19431944


The Ploesti raids were major and costly U.S.
air raids against the refineries of Ploesti,
Romania. The refineries there supplied
almost one-third of Germanys oil requirements before and during World War II. A
land invasion of Romania to seize the Ploesti
refineries was impractical, so on August 1,
1943, the United States launched a yearlong
air campaign to destroy them.
The first air raid on Ploesti was conducted
on June 1, 1942, by 13 B-24 bombers of
Halverson Detachment, led by Colonel
Harry A. Hurry-Up Halverson (1895
1978). The mission originated in Fayid,
Africa. Twelve planes reached the target
and bombed it from high altitude, escaping
without loss. Damage to Ploesti was negligible. Three times during that first week in
June, the Soviet air force sent small numbers
of bombers against Ploesti. The last inflicted
some damage, but at the cost of several
Soviet planes and airmen. That ended Soviet
interest in the refineries. At the Casablanca
Conference in January 1943, President

229

230

Ploesti, Bombing of, 19431944

A U.S. Army Air Forces B-24 bomber flies over a burning oil refinery at Ploesti, Romania,
August 1, 1943. (44th Bomb Group Photograph Collection/United States Army Center of
Military History)

Franklin D. Roosevelt (18821945) and


Prime Minister Winston L. S. Churchill
(18741965) endorsed a plan to bomb
Ploesti from North Africa. Planners decided
a low-level attack would be safer and more
productive than one from the traditional
high level. Three U.S. B-24 bomb groups
from England were added to the two in
Brigadier General Uzal G. Ents (1900
1948) IX Bomber Command, which was
already in North Africa.
After studying the plan (code-named
TIDAL WAVE) with his commanders and
staff, Ent wrote a note to his superior officer,
Major General Lewis H. Brereton, recommending against a low-level mission. Ent did
not know that this had already been decided
at the highest level. Once informed of this,
he began intensive training of the five groups.
On August 1, 1943, 178 B-24s departed
for Ploesti. Eleven bombers either aborted

or were lost en route to the target. Unknown


to the Allies at the time, the Germans
detected and traced the air armada from
takeoff all the way to the target. As a result,
German air defense fighter squadrons and
antiaircraft defenses were fully alerted, the
German fighters being particularly effective
against the bombers during the return from
the mission.
Because of a navigational error, the bomb
runs could not all be made as planned.
Nonetheless, substantial damage was
inflicted on several refineries. Oil production
was reduced only in the short term, however.
The bombing results did prove that the lowlevel attack destroyed more of the target
area than raids made from high altitudes.
However, at this point in the war, the
2,700-mile round-trip raid by unescorted
bombers was an epic one. Losses, although
heavy, were less than Ent had anticipated.

Princip, Gavrilo

Ent had told his men that returning from the


mission was secondary. American losses
included 310 men killed and some 130
wounded (including those who crashed or
landed in neutral territory). Eighty-eight aircraft returned to base, but only 33 were fit to
fly, and Ent had just over half his original
complement of airmen. For this raid, five
men were awarded the Medal of Honor,
three of them posthumously. Ent and several
others were awarded the Distinguished
Service Cross, the United States secondhighest award for heroism.
Ploesti had an impressive and deadly
array of antiaircraft guns and fighter planes
to defend the area during that August 1,
1943, raid. But following the raid, German
general Alfred Gerstenberg (18931959),
who commanded Ploestis defenses during
the entire campaign, improved the defenses
with additional guns and planes and, as a
final touch, smoke pots. These pots were
scattered throughout the refinery area and
could be lit to cover the targets with smoke,
no matter which way the wind was blowing.
Gerstenberg was resourceful. He also
installed an oil pipeline system, linking all
the refineries, so that oil could be diverted
from more damaged refineries to those less
damaged or undamaged, maintaining optimal output.
Between April 5 and August 19, 1944, the
U.S. 15th Air Force made 5,479 high-level
sorties in 19 raids against Ploesti, with a
loss of 223 aircraft, representing 4.1 percent
of the aircraft employed. On June 10, 1944,
46 P-38 fighters made a low-level attack,
and 24 were lost. Some 2,829 American airmen were killed or captured during the
entire campaign. During the summer of
1944, Britains Royal Air Force (RAF) flew
924 high-level sorties against Ploesti, in
which 38 planes (4.1 percent) were lost.

In the raids, the 15th Air Force and the


RAF destroyed nearly 1.2 million tons of
Ploesti oil production, amounting to 84 tons
of oil lost for each ton of bombs dropped.
When Soviet troops entered Ploesti on
August 30, 1944, they found five refineries
producing just 20 percent of normal
production.
Uzal W. Ent
See also: Germany in the Balkans during
World War II; Romania in World War II

Further Reading
Dugan, James, and Carroll Stewart. Ploesti: The
Great Ground-Air Battle of 1 August 1943.
New York: Random House, 1962.
Newby, Leroy W. Target Ploesti: View from a
Bombsight. Novato, CA: Presidio Press,
1983.
Wolff, Leon. Low Level Mission. New York:
Berkley Publishing, 1958.

Princip, Gavrilo (18941918)


The Bosnian youth who assassinated
Austrian archduke Franz Ferdinand and his
wife Sophie, Gavrilo Princip was born to
an Orthodox Serbian peasant family in the
Grahovo Valley in southern Bosnia on
July 13, 1894. It was a time of considerable
social change. The traditional social institution of the zadruga, or extended family,
was dissolving, and this disruption affected
Princips family. After four years of primary
school, at age 13, Princip left the Grahovo
Valley for Sarajevo, where his older and
economically successful brother intended to
enroll him in a Habsburg military school.
When he reached Sarajevo, however, his
brother had changed his mind (supposedly
on the advice of a friend who told him not
to make Gavrilo an executioner of his own

231

232

Putnik, Radomir

people) and enrolled him in the local


Merchants School instead. After three
years of study there, Princip transferred to a
gymnasium.
It was in the gymnasium years that Princip became an ardent Serbian nationalist. In
1911, he joined Young Bosnia, the secret
society that hoped to detach Bosnia from
Austria and join it with a larger Serb state.
In 1912, Princip walked as if on pilgrimage
from Sarajevo to Belgrade, kneeling down
to kiss the soil when he crossed into Serbia.
During the First Balkan War of 1912,
Princip and many other members of Young
Bosnia sought to join the Serbian armys
irregular forces, commanded by Major
Vojislav Tankosic (18801915), a member
of the Central Committee of Unity or Death
(popularly known as the Black Hand), the
principal conspiratorial organization in
Serbia. Turned down in Belgrade because
of his small stature, Princip finally tracked
down Tankosi, who rejected him out of
hand with the words, You are too small
and too weak.
The combination of intense Serbian
nationalism and rejection for physical weakness are the most common explanations
advanced for Princips determination to
commit an act of great consequence on
behalf of his people. In fact, during his first
interrogation after the assassination of
Franz Ferdinand (18631914), he told the
authorities: People took me for a weakling
. . . which I was not. He and the other conspirators secured their weapons from Tankosis organization in Serbia, but whether or
not they acted on instructions from Tankosi
or any other Serbian official is still in question. Princip was one of seven conspirators
who plotted to assassinate the archduke
during his visit to Sarajevo on June 28,
1914. He was the only one who actually
fired a weapon, a pistol with which he

mortally wounded both the archduke and


his wife (although one other conspirator,
Nedjelko Cabrinovic (18951916), earlier
that day did throw a hand grenade, which
missed its target).
Princip was arrested immediately after
the assassination. Tried at Sarajevo on October 28, he was convicted but was spared the
death penalty because he was a minor. He
received a sentence of 20 years in prison,
the maximum permissible. Meanwhile, the
Austro-Hungarian government held Serbia
responsible for the murders of the archduke
and his wife and used them as an excuse
for a preventive war against Serbia, which
led directly to World War I.
Princip lost an arm to tuberculosis while
in prison at Theresienstadt, Austria. He
died there, probably of this disease, on
April 28, 1918.
Karl Roider
See also: Austria-Hungary in the Balkans
during World War I; Sarajevo Assassination,
1914; Serbia in World War I

Further Reading
Cassels, Lavender. The Archduke and the
Assassin: Sarajevo, June 28th 1914. New
York: Stein and Day, 1985.
Dedijer, Vladimir. The Road to Sarajevo. New
York: Simon and Schuster, 1966.
Remak, Joachim. Sarajevo: The Story of a
Political Murder. New York: Criterion,
1959.

Putnik, Radomir (18471917)


A stubborn, hard-edged, austere, and difficult man, Radomir Putnik was one of the
greatest figures produced by Serbia in his
time, responsible for reforms of strategic
and tactical doctrine, organization, and
training that made the Serbian army a potent

Putnik, Radomir

force in Balkan affairs. Serbias first field


marshal (vojvoda), he achieved his greatest
victory and greatest defeat in World War I.
Putnik was born at Kragujevac on January 24, 1847, the second son of a schoolteacher in a family that had returned to
Serbia after a sojourn in Hungary. He was
eighth of 17 graduates in his class at the Serbian Artillery School and was commissioned a second lieutenant in 1866. In the
Serbo-Ottoman War of 1876, he first tasted
action and defeat, his brigade suffering
heavy losses at Kalipolje. He was also
imprisoned for 15 days for clashing with a
superior over supplies but was eventually
pardoned because of his bravery under fire.
He also fought in the Russo-Ottoman War
of 18771878. In 1881 and again in 1883,
he suffered imprisonment for voicing harsh
criticisms of superiors. Serbias disastrous
war against Bulgaria during 18851886
saw him serving on a divisional staff. Having completed Army Staff College in 1889,
he became deputy chief of staff in 1890.
During 18861887 and again from 1888 to
1895, Putnik taught at the military academy.
Having fallen out with the politicians
because of slights to both King Milan and
King Alexander and because of his support
of the Radical Party, Putnik (18541901)
retired in 1896. After the assassination of
King Alexander (18761903) in 1903, he
was recalled, promoted to general, and
made chief of the General Staff. He served
as minister of war during 19041905, during
19061908, and in 1912.
Putnik had mastered French, Russian, and
German so as to keep abreast of contemporary military literature and had written manuals on artillery use and general staff
organization and activities. Now he used
his leadership positions to reorganize,
reequip, and strengthen the army while
developing offensive strategic plans to use

Serbian field marshal Radomir Putnik. Born in


Kraguevac, Serbia, in 1847, he participated in
fighting in 1876 against the Ottoman Empire
and 1885 against Bulgaria. (Library of Congress)

against Turkey and defensive plans to deal


with the Austro-Hungarian Empire and
Bulgaria. The architect of the armys organization and plans, Putnik was, from his teaching days and from maneuvers, thoroughly
acquainted with the entire officer corps of
the army and the Serbian terrain. Thus,
when the First Balkan War began in 1912,
he was able to lead his army to a decisive
victory over the Turks and was made the
first vojvoda of the Serbian army, a term
equivalent to field marshal bestowed only
on one who had won a great victory. In the
Second Balkan War in 1913, his troops
quickly defeated the Bulgarians.
His failing health, due mainly to acute
bronchitis and emphysema exacerbated by

233

234

Putnik, Radomir

a lifetime of chain smoking, led Putnik to


visit the Austrian spa at Gleichenberg
in 1914, and he was there when the AustroHungarian Empires Archduke Franz
Ferdinand was assassinated in late June by
Serbian nationalists. Returning to Serbia,
he resumed command of the nations armies
as the Austro-Hungarian Empire threatened
to declare war. Europes double alliance system, which posed the Triple Entente against
the Triple Alliance, stepped into gear,
quickly bringing the continent to the brink
of a massive war. As the first fighting of
World War I erupted in August, Putnik
furiously made plans for Serbias defense,
fearing correctly that the Austro-Hungarians
would seize the opportunity to crush tiny Serbia once and for all. He correctly assumed
that the Austro-Hungarian Empires war
plans called for an attack in the north, but Serbia got a break when the Austro-Hungarian
troops poised on the northern Serbian frontier
had to be diverted to the Russian Front to
stave off an unexpected Russian offensive.
The Austro-Hungarian Empire did attack,
however, launching an offensive against Serbia on August 12. Putniks planning had
placed three Serbian armies in the north
and northwest of the country, allowing the
Serbians to quickly launch a counterattack
against the Austro-Hungarians that drove
them back across the Drina River after the
four-day Battle of Cer, the first Allied victory of the war. At the urging of his French
allies, Putnik moved to the offensive on September 6 but was driven back into Serbia by
an Austro-Hungarian offensive that began
the following day. Putnik had to conduct a
difficult and tenacious fighting retreat to
defensive positions southwest of Belgrade.
In November, he abandoned the capital
after two months of continuous fighting and
withdrew to the southward, almost out of
ammunition and all but defeated. Late in

November, however, ammunition supplies


began arriving through Salonika from
France. Taking advantage of the overextension of the Austro-Hungarians, Putnik counterattacked at Kolubra on December 3
and, by December 15, could assure King
Peter I (18441921) that the only AustroHungarians still on Serbian soil were prisoners. It was Putniks finest hour.
In October 1915, Serbia was again
attacked, this time by Bulgarian and German
armies as well as by the Austro-Hungarians.
Putniks hopes of receiving assistance from
Greece or from an Allied expeditionary
force were dashed, and the Serbian army
had to defend more than 900 kilometers of
the countrys border. On October 5, the
Germans and Austro-Hungarians struck
from the north. Exhausted by an attack of
influenza, Putnik was too ill to take part in
military operations but oversaw decisions
and imbued his subordinates with the will
to fight. Overwhelmed in the north, the
Serbians were attacked in mid-October
from the east by two Bulgarian armies. The
Serbian army escaped encirclement and
fought to maintain contact with the Allies
in Thessaloniki and preserve an escape
route through Kosovo and into Albania. By
late November, they had been cut off from
contact with the Allies, and the only options
were surrender or flight.
Putniks last command was to direct the
army to risk the icy passes of the Albanian
mountains and break out to the Adriatic.
Unable to walk, he was carried by four soldiers over the mountains in a sedan chair,
accompanied by the king in an oxcart.
It took 11 days to reach the sea. Evacuated
with the Serbian government to Corfu, Putnik was dismissed early in 1916 along with
the rest of the high command. He died on
May 17, 1917, while convalescing in Nice.
Joseph McCarthy

Putnik, Radomir
See also: Cer Mountain, Battle of, 1914; Serbia in the Balkan Wars; Serbia in World War
I; Serbian Retreat, 1915

Further Reading
Adams, John Clinton. Flight in Winter. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1942.
Kiraly, Bela K., and Nandor F. Dresziger, eds.
East Central European Society in World
War I. Boulder, CO: Social Science

Monographs; Highland Lakes, NJ: Atlantic


Research and Publications, 1985.
Kiraly, Bela K., and Albert A. Nofi, eds. East
Central European War Leaders. Boulder,
CO: Social Science Monographs; Highland
Lakes, NJ: Atlantic Research and Publications, 1988.
Stokesbury, James L. A Short History of World
War II. New York: Morrow, 1980.

235

R
Radomir Rebellion, 1918

In an effort to allay the growing rebellion,


the Sofia government and Czar Ferdinand
(18611948) released Aleksandur Stamboliski (18791923) from prison on September 25. The government had detained
Stamboliski, the leader of BANU, since
1915 because of his opposition to the war. In
Radomir, the rebels appointed Stamboliski
prime minister and Daskalov commander in
chief of the army. The forces of the new
republic advanced toward the capital on
September 29, the same day the armistice
was signed in Thessaloniki. The Sofia
government hastily organized a defense force
consisting of military cadets, members of the
Macedonian revolutionary organization
(VMRO), and a German division newly
arrived from the Crimea. When they met on
the southwestern outskirts of Sofia on September 30, the pro-government forces prevailed. As many as 2,500 rebels were killed
in the battle. Sofia government forces took
Radomir on October 2. The rebels melted
away. By this time their chief demand, that
Bulgaria leave the war, already realized.
On October 3, Czar Ferdinand abdicated
in favor of his son, who assumed the Bulgarian throne as Czar Boris III (18941943).
After the success of BANU in the 1919 elections, Stamboliski became prime minister.
Daskalov also served in the government.
Macedonian terrorists murdered Stamboliski at his farm near Pazardzhik on
June 14, 1923. They assassinated Daskalov
in Prague on August 26 of that same year.
Richard C. Hall

The Radomir Rebellion was the name of the


uprising of disgruntled military units and
supporters of the Bulgarian Agrarian Union
(BANU) in Bulgaria during September 1918
at the end of World War I. Bulgaria had been
at war, with a brief interlude, since October 1912. The entire country was exhausted.
On September 14, 1918, Entente forces
launched an attack on Bulgarian positions
on the Macedonian Front at Dobro Pole
with the intention of knocking Bulgaria out
of the war. After two days of heavy fighting,
Bulgarian lines collapsed on September 16.
Soldiers from the Second Balkan Division
and the Third Thracian Division refused
orders and surged back toward Sofia in
order to punish those in the government
they held responsible for the miserable conditions they had experienced for the past
three years and for Bulgarias second military defeat in the past five years.
As a result of the defeat and mutiny, the
Bulgarian government decided on September 25 to seek an armistice with the Entente.
A Bulgarian delegation signed the agreement on September 29 in Thessaloniki,
Greece. Meanwhile, the soldiers crossed
the Bulgarian frontier. On September 27,
1918, Raiko Daskalov (18861923), a leading member of BANU, the main Bulgarian
peasant party, proclaimed a republic in the
southwestern Bulgarian town of Radomir.
This government became known as the
Radomir Republic.

236

Romania, Invasion of, 1916


See also: Bulgaria in World War I; Dobro
Pole, Battle of, 1918; Ferdinand I, Czar of
Bulgaria (18611948); Stamboliski, Aleksandur (18791923); VMRO

Further Reading
Bell, John D. Peasants in Power: Alexander
Stamboliski and the Bulgarian Agrarian
Union, 18991923. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1977.
Chary, Frederick B. The History of Bulgaria.
Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO, 2011.
Crampton, R. J. Bulgaria 18781918: A
History. Boulder, CO: East European
Monographs, 1983.

Romania, Invasion of, 1916


When World War I erupted in August 1914,
Romania declared neutrality. Since 1883,
Romania had a secret alliance with AustriaHungary, and King Carol Hohenzollern
(18391914) was pro-German. Many politicians, however, favored the Entente as a
means to achieve Romanian nationalist
goals in Austria-Hungary. After the death
of King Carol and the succession of this
nephew Ferdinand (18651927), the country
wavered back and forth between the Central
Powers and the Entente until the summer
of 1916. Then the apparent success of
the Russian Brusilov offensive against
Austro-Hungarian forces convinced the
Romanian government that the time was
propitious to join the Entente. Romania
declared war on Austria-Hungary on
August 18, 1916. On the understanding that
Entente forces at Salonika would launch
attacks to keep the Bulgarians occupied,
the Romanian army undertook an offensive
into Hungarian-ruled Transylvania, the
major objective of Romanian policy. Beginning on August 27, the Romanian First, Second, and North Armies crossed three passes

of the Transylvanian Alps and descended


down into Transylvania.
The Romanians seriously miscalculated.
By mid-August, the Brusilov Offensive was
spent. Also, the Bulgarians preempted the
Entente offensive by opening an offensive
of their own that enabled them to seize significant territory in southern Macedonia.
The Central Powers quickly responded to
the Romanian invasion of Transylvania.
Both Austro-Hungarian and German troops
reinforced the superannuated reserve forces
that had guarded the Transylvanian passes
and planned a punitive counterattack.
The first stage of the Central Powers
counterattack began on began on September 1, when the Bulgarian Third Army
under the command of the renowned
German general August von Mackensen
(18491945) and with a contingent of Ottoman troops, crossed into Romanian-held
Dobrudja (Romanian: Dobrogea; Bulgarian:
Dobrudzha). Von Mackensen intended this
attack to draw Romanian forces away from
Transylvania. Also, the Bulgarians were
eager to recover this territory that they had
lost three years earlier in the Second Balkan
War. To counter the Bulgarian attack,
Russian troops marched into Dobrudja.
They, however, were unable to prevent the
fall of the fortress city of Turtucaia on September 4. A Romanian cross-Danubian
counterattack into Bulgaria on October 2
failed. By the end of October, all the former
Bulgarian Dobrudja and much of the pre
Balkan War Romanian Dobrudja was under
von Mackensens control. The important
Romanian Black Sea port of Constanta fell
to the Central Powers on October 22.
Meanwhile, the Austro-Hungarian First
Army and the German Ninth Army combined under the command of former German
chief of general staff Erich von Falkenhayn
(18611922) began a counteroffensive that

237

238

Romania, Invasion of, 1944

cleared the Romanians from Transylvania


by mid-October. The Central Powers forces
then proceeded on into Romania. At first
determined Romanian resistance held up
the Austro-Hungarian and German advance.
In mid-November, however, the Central
Powers forces broke through the Romanian
defenses in three locations and proceeded
into the Wallachian plains toward the Romanian capital of Bucharest. Von Mackensen
augmented the threat to Bucharest with an
attack launched from the Bulgarian Danubian port of Svishtov across the river on
November 23. A mixed force of AustroHungarians, Bulgarians, Germans, and
Ottomans quickly established themselves
on the north bank of the Danube. The overextended Romanians lacked the forces to
contain this new invasion. The appearance
of Central Powers forces behind the
Romanian defenders of Wallachia forced a
Romanian retreat toward Bucharest. On
November 27, a Bulgarian unit crossed the
Danube from Ruse and seized the Romanian
town of Giurgiu. The three Central Powers
forces converged on Bucharest. Brushing
aside desperate Romanian attempts to hold
the capital, the Central Powers entered
Bucharest on December 4. With the help of
some British officers, the Romanians succeeded in destroying much of the oil infrastructure around Ploesti before the Central
Powers could arrive. By the end of 1916,
the Central Powers had overrun the remainder of Wallachia. After the fall of Bucharest,
the Romanian government established itself
in Iasi, Moldavia, near the Russian frontier.
The invasion of Romania was an outstanding success for the Central Powers.
They acted quickly and decisively. The
Romanians suffered heavy losses in manpower and material. Despite the loss of
much territory, including their capitol, the
Romanians remained in the war. With the

help of a French military mission, their


army would revive in 1917.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Carol I, King of Romania (1839
1914); Dobrudja; Macedonian Front, 1916
1918; Romania in World War I

Further Reading
Barnett, Michael B. Prelude to Blitzkrieg: The
1916 Austro-German Campaign in Romania. Bloomington: Indiana University
Press, 2013.
Hitchins, Keith. Rumania, 18661947.
Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1994.
Torrey, Glenn. Romania and World War I. Iasi:
Center for Romanian Studies, 1998.
Torrey, Glenn. The Romanian Battlefront in
World War I. Lawrence: University Press
of Kansas, 2011.

Romania, Invasion of, 1944


In 1944, the Soviet Union invaded Romania,
leading to the surrender of Romania to the
Allies and a declaration of war on Germany.
Romania became an ally of Germany after
the government of Ion Antonescu (1882
1946) signed the Tripartite Pact on November 23, 1940, and invaded the Soviet Union
with Germany on June 22, 1941. The invasion of Romania had four major strategic
goals: the removal of Romania from the
Axis, the end of the supply of oil and food
from Romania to Germany, the entrance to
the Balkans for the Soviet army, and the
maintenance of pressure on the German
armies along a broad front.
The Romanian army had suffered huge
losses in men and equipment during the
Battle of Stalingrad and subsequent fighting
in Ukraine as the Soviet Union pushed
the German army west. In the spring of
1944, Soviet offensives had pushed elements of German Army Group South and

Romania, Invasion of, 1944

the twice-reconstituted Third and Fourth


Romanian Armies back to the Dniester
River, which marked a defensible border
for Romania. Having pushed Axis forces
out of most of the Ukraine and Crimea, the
Soviet army continued its offensive operations into Romania. The Romanian armies
were integrated into the German Sixth and
Eighth Armies along a defensive line of the
Carpathian foothills of northern Romania
and the Dniester River. On April 5, 1944, the
Third and Fourth Ukrainian Fronts launched
the First Jassy-Kishinev Operation in
northeastern Romania. The offensive was a
major direct continuation of the Ukrainian
offensives with the strategic goals mentioned
above. The Soviet forces achieved some
initial success against poorly equipped
Romanian units, but German armored and
mobile units managed to hold and counterattack the advancing Soviets. By early June,
the Axis armies had reestablished defensive
lines approximating those at the beginning of
the Soviet offensive. After the failed offensive, the Soviet Union diverted units and
supplies from its southern forces to aid the
preparation of a major offensive in Belarus.
When Soviet Operation Bagration on
June 22, 1944, in Belarus placed enormous
strain on the German army, the German
command began to strip armored forces
from its Romanian front during July 1944.
On August 20, 1944, the Second Ukrainian
Front, commanded by General Rodion
Malinovsky (18981967), and the Third
Ukrainian Front, commanded by General
Fyodor Tolbukhin (18941949) launched the
Second Jassy-Kishinev Operation with the
immediate goal of a double envelopment
of the German Sixth Army, commanded by
General Maximilian Fretter-Pico (1892
1984), which had been reconstituted after its
destruction at Stalingrad. The German and
Romanian forces were heavily outnumbered

in armored vehicles, artillery, antitank guns,


mobile infantry, and air power. By August 23,
1944, the German Sixth Army was encircled
and eliminated as a fighting force after a double envelopment by the Third and Fourth
Ukrainian Fronts east of the Prut River. The
Romanian Third and Fourth Armies, positioned east and west of the German Sixth
Army respectively, were left disorganized
and retreating where they could.
With the rapid collapse of Axis forces,
Romanias King Michael (1921) joined a
coup by the army and government opponents overthrowing Ion Antonescu on
August 23, 1944. The new government rapidly concluded a cease-fire with the Soviet
Union and declared that Romania was joining the Allies. The remnants of the Romanian army were integrated under Soviet
army command and fought for the remainder of World War II on the side of the Allies.
The Romanian army played an important
role in allowing the Soviet army to advance
rapidly through the Carpathian mountain
passes into Hungary and along the Yugoslavian frontier. To the south, Bulgaria ended
its war with the Western Allies and declared
war on Germany on September 8, 1944.
Brian G. Smith
See also: Antonescu, Ion (18821946);
Michael I, King of Romania (1921); Romania in World War II

Further Reading
Axworthy, Mark, Cornel Scafes, and Cristian
Craciunoiu. Third Axis, Fourth Ally: Romanian Armed Forces in the European War,
19411945. London: Arms and Armour
Press, 1995.
Erickson, John. The Road to Berlin: Stalins
War with Germany. Vol. 2. New Haven,
CT: Yale University Press, 1999.
Glantz, David. Red Storm over the Balkans:
The Failed Soviet Invasion of Romania,

239

240

Romania in the Balkan Wars


Spring 1944. Lawrence: University Press of
Kansas, 2006.

Romania in the Balkan Wars


At the beginning of the twentieth century,
Romania, the largest national state in
southeastern Europe, had a strong interest
in the events south of the Danube. Romanian
territorial interests were limited to southern
Dobrudja (Romanian: Dobrogea; Bulgarian:
Dobrudzha), which the Congress of Berlin
in 1878 had assigned to Bulgaria. This
territory did not contain a significant Romanian population. Nevertheless, control of
southern Dobrudja would extend Romanias
Black Sea coast and add productive agricultural land to Romanias economy.
Romanias main interest in the events of
the Balkan Wars, however, was to maintain
its position as the dominant power in
the Balkans. To this end, the Bucharest
government concluded an alliance with
Austria-Hungary in 1882 but also maintained good relations with the Ottoman
Empire and, by the first decade of the twentieth century, developed a warming interaction with Russia. In order to establish a
profile in Ottoman-controlled Macedonia,
the Romanian government posed as the
protector of the Aromani, or Vlachs, a fellow Latin-speaking transhumant people
living mainly as shepherds in the uplands
of the Balkan Peninsula. The Romanian
government funded churches and schools
for this group.
In the summer of 1912, when the Balkan
League of Bulgaria, Greece, Montenegro,
and Serbia was coming together, the
Bulgarian government approached Bucharest. The Bulgarians were eager to reach
some kind of accommodation with Romania
before beginning a war against the Ottoman
Empire, because of the Romanian alliance

with Austria-Hungary and Romanian friendship with the Ottomans. The Romanians
refused to undertake any commitments at
this point.
The First Balkan War began on 17 October. Bulgarian, Greek, and Serbian forces
soon achieved unexpected victories against
the Ottomans. When the extent of the
Bulgarian victories in Thrace became apparent, the Romanians presented their bill.
At first, King Carol (18391914) and the
Romanian government considered the military occupation of Bulgarian Dobrudja. The
Austro-Hungarians and Germans, however,
advised restraint and gave assurances that
the Great Powers would deal with the issue
of compensation. The initial Romanian
demand for the Danubian port of Silistra
(Silistre) was soon supplemented by the
stipulation that territorial compensation for
Bulgarian conquests in the south should
include all of Bulgarian Dobrudja. The Bulgarians, after their victories over the
Ottomans, were reluctant to part with any
territory. They made a few minor territorial
concessions in the vicinity of Silistra.
Nevertheless, they considered the Romanian
demands to be blackmail.
The impasse in the Romanian dispute
with Bulgaria led the Great Powers to
intervene. The Russians in particular were
eager to lure Romania away from the Triple
Alliance while maintaining their close relationship with Bulgaria. Russian foreign minister Sergei Sazonov (18601927) convoked
a conference of Great Power ambassadors in
St. Petersburg to resolve the conflict. The
conference first met on March 31, 1913.
After several weeks of deliberation, on
May 8, it awarded Romania Silistra in compensation for Bulgarias gains in Macedonia
and Thrace. This failed to satisfy Romania.
Soon afterward, the Athens and Belgrade
governments, who had disputes with Sofia

Romania in the Balkan Wars

over Macedonia, approached Bucharest.


While no formal arrangement resulted, the
continuity of interest among Greece, Serbia,
and Romania against Bulgaria was obvious.
The Bulgarian attack on Greek and
Serbian positions on the night of June 29
30, 1913 began the Second Balkan War. In
response, the Romanian army called for the
mobilization of 300,000 men on July 5,
1913. The Bucharest government was determined upon intervention. It declared war on
July 10. That same day, 80,000 soldiers of
the Romanian Fifth Corps commanded by
General Ioan Culcer (18531928) crossed
the frontier into Bulgarian Dobrudja
(Dobrudzha) and, meeting no resistance,
occupied a line from Tutrakan on the
Danube to Balchik on the Black Sea. This
corresponded to the territory the Romanians
had demanded from Bulgaria.
Then, on the night of 14-15 July 1415,
the 250,000 men of the Romanian Danube
Army commanded by Crown Prince Ferdinand (18651927) crossed its namesake
river at the Bulgarian cities of Gigen, Nikopol, and Oryahovo. With their armies totally
committed in Macedonia fighting against
the Greeks and Serbs, the Bulgarians offered
no resistance to the Romanian invasion.
After landing on Bulgarian soil, the Romanian units regrouped into two elements.
One moved in a westerly direction toward
Ferdinand (now Montana), which they took
on July 18. The other element set off on a
southwesterly course toward the Bulgarian
capital of Sofia. By July 23, a cavalry unit
from this element had arrived on the outskirts of Sofia. With the Bulgarian army
away to the southwest, the Romanians were
in position to enter the Bulgarian capital.
Romanian aviators flew over Sofia and
dropped leaflets. On July 25, part of the
northern element met the Serbian Second
Army at Belogradchik, isolating Vidin, the

largest city in northwestern Bulgaria. Troop


movements ceased with the conclusion of
an armistice on July 29.
On July 30, negotiations ending the war
began in Bucharest, as befitting Romanian
interest in maintaining strong influence
in southeastern Europe. The Treaty of
Bucharest of August 10, 1913, established
that Romania had gained its war objectives.
Bulgaria ceded southern Dobrudja. Bulgarias defeat confirmed Romanias dominant
position in southeastern Europe.
Romanian intervention in the Second
Balkan War proved critical to the success
of the anti-Bulgarian coalition. By the time
Romanian troops crossed the Danube River,
Bulgarian counterattacks against Greek and
Serbian forces had stabilized the fighting in
Macedonia. This raised the possibility of a
decisive Bulgarian offensive against the
overextended Greeks and Serbs. The Bulgarian could not, however, counter the
Romanian invasion. This, together with the
Ottoman invasion of southeastern Bulgaria,
ensured the defeat of Bulgaria. While
Romania suffered no combat casualties
in the war, around 6,000 soldiers died of
cholera. Undoubtedly, Romanian soldiers
brought the disease with them upon their
return home.
After the Second Balkan War, Romania
remained dominant in the Balkan Peninsula.
Romanias territorial gain in the Second
Balkan War proved to be ephemeral. In
August 1940, the Bulgarian government,
with the tacit approval of Nazi Germany,
demanded the return of southern Dobrudja.
With the Treaty of Craiova of September 7,
1940, Romania ceded southern Dobrudja
back to Bulgaria.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Balkan League, 1912; Balkan War,
First, 19121913; Balkan War, Second, 1913;

241

242

Romania in World War I


Balkan Wars, 19121913, Causes; Balkan
Wars, 19121913, Consequences

Further Reading
Hall, Richard C. The Balkan Wars, 1912
1913: Prelude to the First World War.
London: Routledge, 2000.
Hitchens, Keith. Rumania, 18661947.
Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1994.
Jowett, Philip S. Armies of the Balkan Wars,
19121913. Oxford: Osprey, 2011.
Zbuchea, Gheorghe. Roma nia si Razboaiele
Balcanice 19121913. Bucharest: Albatros,
1999.

Romania in World War I


Romania occupied an important position in
the northeastern Balkan region. It extended
over 46,000 square miles and had a population of some 9 million people. Romania consisted of three major areas: Wallachia,
Moldavia, and Dobrudja (Dobrudzha).
While the inhabitants of Wallachia and
Moldavia were predominantly ethnic
Romanians and practiced Eastern Orthodox
Christianity, Dobrudja contained a much
more diverse population, including many
Muslims. Indeed, in this area, Romanians
were in the minority. Romania was rich in
grains with abundant arable land, and its oil
fields at Ploesti were the largest in Europe.
On August 27, 1916, Romania declared
war on the Central Powers. This came as
something of a surprise, as Romania had
signed a defensive military alliance with
Germany in 1883 that had been renewed
by Romanian king Carol I in 1913. Carol
(18391914) was also of the HohenzollernSigmaringen line and related to German
kaiser Wilhelm II.
At the beginning of World War I, the
Romanian government declared its neutrality. The vast majority of King Carols

cabinet favored such a course, and Premier


Ionel Bratianu (18641927) justified it on
the basis that Romania was bound to support
Germany and Austria-Hungary only in the
event of a defensive war. More importantly,
Romania coveted Transylvania, then part of
Hungary and home to 3 million ethnic
Romanians. At the same time, however,
Romania had fears concerning Russia and
maintained pretensions to the Russian province of Bessarabia, which had a large ethnic
Romanian population.
The sole rail line connecting Germany
and the Ottoman Empire ran through
Romania, and Russia pressured Romania to
block this route that allowed transit of
goods from Germany to the Ottoman
Empire. Romania bowed to this demand.
It also moved closer to the Entente when,
in December 1914, it accepted a loan from
Britain to strengthen its military.
Romanian foreign policy clearly favored
the Entente. In October 1914, Carol I died.
He was succeeded by his nephew, Ferdinand
I (18651927), who allowed Bra tianu to
control foreign policy. Throughout 1915,
the Romanian premier bargained with the
Entente. He demanded simultaneous Allied
offensives on the Eastern and Western
Fronts to exert maximum pressure on the
Central Powers, which came in 1916 with
the Somme and the Brusilov offensives. He
also asked for, and obtained, stocks of war
materiel from the Allies. Most importantly,
he secured promises of Romanian territorial
aggrandizement, including Transylvania but
also the Banat of Temesvar, a rich agricultural region; Bukovina; and southern
Galicia. All of these areas had mixed populations. Russia agreed that if Romania
entered the war, it would provide 200,000
troops to protect that country from a potential Bulgarian attack from the south. The
Western Allies also assured Bra tianu of

Romania in World War I

assistance from a half million Allied troops


at Salonika and an expanded effort against
Bulgaria. The promise of an Entente offensive against Bulgaria seemed to provide
Romania with the security it wanted against
a Bulgarian attack. The apparent success of
the Brusilov Offensive finally persuaded
the Romanians to join the Entente.
On August 17, 1916, Romania officially
signed the Treaty of Bucharest with the Triple Entente. Ten days later, the Romanian
government declared war on the Central
Powers and sent 80 percent of its army in
an invasion of Austria-Hungary to secure
Transylvania. The Allies were caught off
guard by the Romanian attempt to take
Transylvania, as they had anticipated that
Romania would concentrate its military
efforts against Bulgaria.
Bulgarian forces, taking advantage of the
weakened Romanian troop deployment
along the Danube, then attacked north. The
Bulgarians easily deflected a Romanian
attempt to counterattack across the Danube.
Romania soon found itself fighting on
two fronts: combined German and AustroHungarian forces to the west and north, and
the Bulgarian army to the south. In addition,
promised Russian assistance did not materialize. By the time the Romanians joined the
Entente, the Russians had exhausted their
resources and had started to retreat from
the gains they had made under General
Brusilov because of German pressure.
Finally, the French commander of Allied
forces at Salonika, General Maurice Sarrail
(18561929), failed to support the Romanians by promptly attacking the Bulgarians.
Fighting on two fronts and lacking
adequate supplies and reinforcements, the
poorly trained and equipped Romanian
forces were on the defensive from September to December 1916. British forces,
fearing the imminent fall of Romania,

sabotaged the Ploesti oil fields on December 5 and set fire to more than 800,000 tons
of oil. The Central Powers occupied the
capital of Bucharest on December 6, 1916,
and the Romanian army was forced into the
northeast corner of the country, across the
Serit River, in Moldavia to regroup.
Combined Romanian and Russian forces
launched an attack across the Serit River
into Moldavia in July 1917, and in the
battles of Ma ra s ti, Ma ra s es ti, and Oituz
they defeated the Central Powers forces,
although with high casualty rates. The
defensive victories of 1917, together with a
French effort to retrain and reequip the
Romanian army after the defeats of 1916,
somewhat restored Romanian morale. General Alexandru Averescu (18591938) was
an important figure in the defensive victories
in Moldavia. The collapse of the Russian
military and the second Russian Revolution
in November 1917, however, ended these
efforts. In December 1917, almost all
Russian troops were withdrawn by the provisional Russian government, forcing
Romania to sign an armistice with Germany
on December 9, known as the Truce of
Foscani.
Romania had no choice but to accept the
preliminary surrender terms of March 5,
1918, which ceded Dobrudja to Bulgaria
and brought the demobilization of its armed
forces. The Treaty of Bucharest signed on
May 7, 1918, formally ended Romanian
hostilities between Romania and the Central
Powers. It provided for the demobilization
of 5 of 15 Romanian army divisions and
placed manpower restrictions on the remaining 10. It also set limits of the munitions
Romania could retain. In addition, Romania
was forced to cede Dobrudja to the Central
Powers, border regions to Austria-Hungary,
and control over the Danube to the Central
Powers (including the right to station

243

244

Romania in World War I

warships on the river). This treaty and


Romanias catastrophic personnel losses
535,706 in all, 71.4 percent of all Romanians who took up arms, of whom approximately 200,000 were wounded or prisoners
and 335,706, 44 percent of the total, were
deadwere devastating to the country. The
treaty also gave Germany a 90-year lease
on the Ploesti oil fields and access to its
grain production.
Meanwhile amidst the revolutionary turmoil in Russia, the provincial assembly of
Bessarabia, the Sfatul Ta rii, looked to
Romania for security. On April 5, 1918, it
voted to unify with Romania. Just as Romania suffered defeat in the west, it made gains
in the east.
Romania was saved by the ultimate Allied
victory in the war. On September 29, 1918,
Bulgaria was forced to sue for peace. Taking
heart from this development and the collapse
of the Austro-Hungarian war effort, on October 12, Romania reconstituted its government
with the formation of a national council. On
November 10, 1918, one day before the
Allied armistice with Germany took effect,
Romania abrogated the Treaty of Bucharest
and reentered the war on the Allied side.
In summer 1919, Romanian forces
advanced into Hungary to assist with the
overthrow of the Communist government
of Bela Kun that had seized power in Budapest the previous March. Romanian forces
remained in place as occupiers for several
months, extracting heavy reparations (or
looting) and seeking an advantageous
military and territorial position prior to
Hungarys eventual conclusion of the Treaty
of Trianon with the Allies in June 1920.
Although Allied pressure forced Romania
to withdraw its forces from Hungary in late
1919, in practice Romania benefited greatly
from the Allied victory. In an effort to
strengthen that country against a resurgence

of Austria and Hungary and also to bar


Communist Russia from expansion in a
southwesterly direction, the conferees at
the Paris Peace Conference granted Romania important territorial gains that it had
not won on the battlefield. These included
the former Hungarian territories of
Transylvania; the eastern Banat, including
Temesva r (the remainder was awarded to
Yugoslavia); and southern Dobrudja, first
taken from Bulgaria during the Second
Balkan War of 1913. The country also
obtained the former Austrian province
of Bukovina, which contained many
Romanians and Ukrainians. This region,
like Bessarabia, had declared a desire to be
part of Romania. The acquisition of this
territory doubled the size of Romania.
Many Romanians saw their country
as Greater Romania, Roma nia Mare. The
territorial acquisitions, however, also
brought complex minority problems that
served to weaken the country in the decades
that followed.
Laura J. Hilton
See also: Averescu, Alexandru (18591938);
Bucharest, Treaty of, 1918; Marasesti, Battle
of, 1917

Further Reading
Alexandrescu, Vasile. Romania in World War
I: A Synopsis of Military History. Bucharest: Military Publishing House, 1985.
MacMillan, Margaret. Paris, 1919: Six Months
That Changed the World. New York:
Random House, 2002.
Petrescu-Comnene, Nicolae. The Great War
and the Rumanians: Notes and Documents
on World War I. Iasi: Center for Romanian
Studies, 2000.
Torrey, Glenn E. Romania and World War I:
A Collection of Studies. Ias i, Romania,
and Portland, OR: Center for Romanian
Studies, 1998.

Romania in World War II


Torrey, Glenn E. The Romanian Battlefront in
World War I. Lawrence: University Press
of Kansas, 2011.

Romania in World War II


Romania played an important role in World
War II. A major producer of both oil and
grain, it had the third-largest military establishment of the European Axis powers, and
after it switched sides in August 1944, it
became the fourth-largest Allied military
presence. Romania entered the war for
nationalistic reasonsto maintain its
independence and reclaim territories lost in
1940.
Following the Balkan Wars and World
War I, Romania secured territories from
Hungary and Russia that united most Romanian peoples into a single country for the
first time in centuries, a source of great
national pride. In the acquisition of Transylvania from Hungary, it also secured a restive
Hungarian population. Hungary was bent on
the return of that territory. The Soviet Union
also sought the return of Bessarabia. To
shore up his southern flank, Adolf Hitler
put heavy pressure on Hungary, Romania,
and Bulgaria to join the Axis powers. On
May 29, 1940, the Romanian government
announced its acceptance of Hitlers plan
for a new European order. Bereft of
French and British support, it had no alternative. Under the terms of the GermanSoviet Non-Aggression Pact of August 23,
1939, the Soviet Union had been awarded
Bessarabia. In the wake of the defeat of
France, Soviet leader Josef Stalin cashed in
his remaining chips. Both Germany and
Italy pressured Romania to accede to the
Soviet demands of June 28, 1940, to give
the Soviet Union Bessarabia and also
northern Bukovina, which had not been
Soviet territory before.

Hungary also secured German and Italian


support for the return of territory lost to
Romania following World War I. Under
terms of the Second Vienna Award of
August 30, 1940, dictated by Germany and
Italy to stabilize the political situation
between Romania and Hungary, Romania
ceded to Hungary north-central Transylvania and other Romanian territory north
of Oradea. Also under German pressure,
Romania ceded to Bulgaria southern
Dobrudja in the September 7, 1940, Treaty
of Craiova, thereby restoring the preWorld
War I boundary between those two states.
Almost overnight, Romania had lost half of
its territory and population, greatly reducing
its ability to defend itself.
Romanias King Carol II (18931953)
never had popular support. Married to
a Greek princess, he flaunted his longtime love affair with his mistress, Elena
Magda Lupescu (18951977). His
government was further destabilized by frequent cabinet turnovers and widespread corruption. National outrage over the loss of
Romanian territories to the Soviet Union,
Hungary, and Bulgaria allowed the proFascist, anti-Semitic Iron Guard to force
Carols abdication on September 6, 1940.
He fled Bucharest with his mistress and
nine train cars loaded with royal booty.
Carols 19-year old son, Michael (Mihai;
(1921), replaced him but was an impotent
figurehead. Real power rested in the recently
appointed prime minister and World War I
military hero General Ion Antonescu
(18821946), who proclaimed himself conductator (leader). Intensely nationalistic,
Antonescu managed to maintain significant
independence within the Nazi sphere.
In October 1940, the first of 500,000
German advisers arrived in Romania,
ostensibly to protect Ploesti, the site of
Europes second-largest oil fields. Romania

245

246

Romania in World War II

Green-shirted young fascists, Romanias Iron Guard, stand side-by-side with traditionallydressed men in the Place de Minai Viteazu in Bucharest, December 10, 1940. (Keystone/
Getty Images)

proved an important source of natural (nonsynthetic) oil for Germany; it also supplied virtually all of Fascist Italys oil during the war.
On November 23, Romania officially
joined the Axis powers. Antonescu declined
to participate in the subjugation of Yugoslavia in April 1941, but he readily assisted
with the invasion of the Soviet Union in
order to reclaim Romanias lost territories
to the east. When the invasion began on
June 22, 1941, he called for a holy war
against Bolshevism. On July 23, Army
Group Antonescu, composed of Romanian
and German troops, crossed the Prut
River. By midmonth, Romania again owned
Bessarabia and northern Bukovina. Most
Romanians, including frontline troops,
believed their war was over.
It was not. Antonescu agreed to send
Romanian troops to capture the Soviet Black
Sea port of Odessa. In return, Hitler granted

Romania all the territory between Bessarabia


and the Black Sea, including Odessa, the
Russian Marseille. After taking Odessa at
horrendous cost, increasingly demoralized
Romanian soldiers fought in the Crimea, the
Caucasus, and the southern USSR. Romania
furnished more troops to the war against the
Soviet Union than all other German satellites
combined. Antonescu vainly hoped this
effort would be rewarded with the return of
Transylvania, since Hungary provided far
less support for Hitlers war. On June 12,
1942, American bombers based in North
Africa struck Ploesti. Over the next two
years, no single raid did exceptional damage,
but the cumulative effect significantly diminished the flow of oil to Germany.
In an effort to take Stalingrad, Hitler
stripped the flanks on either side of the
beleaguered city of German forces and substituted the much less well-equipped,

Romania in World War II

motivated, and trained Romanian Third


Army to the north, and Fourth Army to the
south. On November 18, a Soviet counteroffensive smashed through the Romanian
Third Army. Two days later, the Fourth
Army suffered the same fate. Both armies
were effectively destroyed. Those Romanian
soldiers who sought safety in Stalingrad
perished there with their German allies.
Stalingrad was a Romanian as well as a
German catastrophe. Surviving Romanian
forces joined the general retreats of 1943.
By the spring of 1944, the Red Army had
retaken the Crimea and was on the border
of prewar Romania.
After the Stalingrad disaster, the Romanians increasingly sought a way out of the
war. The government began unofficial contacts with the Allies in Ankara. These made
little headway because of American and
British insistence that the Romanians
would have to deal with the Soviets.
The wartime anti-Semitic government
sanctioned the killing of Jews. More than
40,000 Soviet Jews reportedly were killed
near Odessa alone, yet about half of Romanias Jews, mainly in the areas of Wallachia
and Moldavia, survived the war. Antonescu
protected many to utilize their experience
in industrial and economic management.
Additionally, a long-standing tradition of
corruption among Romanian officials made
buying fake identity papers and passports
relatively simple.
Throughout 1942, Antonescu was under
considerable pressure from other Romanian
political leaders to withdraw the nations
troops from the Soviet Union, but he refused
to do so. He pointed out that the army was
more than 900 miles deep inside Soviet
territory and that the Germans controlled
the lines of communication and would
surely wreak vengeance on Romania and
occupy the country. As the military situation

deteriorated in 1943 following the Soviet


victory in the Battle of Stalingrad, Antonescu authorized peace feelers, but these
foundered on the Anglo-American insistence on unconditional surrender. On
August 23, 1944, with Soviet forces having
crossed the eastern border, young King
Michael ordered the arrest of Antonescu
and announced that Romania was withdrawing from the Axis alliance. Even Romanians
were caught by surprise. Antonescu was
later tried by the Soviets and was executed
in June 1945.
Romania turned on its former allies in
hopes of securing cobelligerent status, as
Italy had been accorded, and maintaining
its independence after the war. But such
hopes proved illusory. On October 9, 1944,
British prime minister Winston L. S.
Churchill (18741965) and Soviet premier
Josef Stalin (18791953) agreed that the
USSR would have 90 percent predominance in postwar Romania.
In February 1945, surrounded by Soviet
tanks, King Michael had little choice but to
create an essentially Communist government. That government forced him to abdicate in December 1947, although Stalin and
U.S. president Harry S. Truman (1884
1972) both decorated him for personal courage in overthrowing Antonescu. Trapped
between major powers, Romania had tried
to hold on to its land, people, and independence by allying itself first with one side
and then with the other. Instead, it became
a Communist puppet state. Of all its lost territories, only Transylvania was returned to
Romania after the war.
Gerald D. Swick
See also: Antonescu, Ion (18821946); Carol
II, King of Romania (18931953); Holocaust
in the Balkans; Michael I, King of Romania
(1921); Ploesti, Bombing of, 19431944;

247

248

Romanian Campaign in Hungary, 1919


Romania, Invasion of, 1944; Romanian Coup,
August 1944; Second Vienna Award, Stalingrad, Battle of, 19421943; Vienna Award,
Second

Further Reading
Axworthy, Mark, Cornel Scafes, and Christian
Craciunoiu. Third Axis, Fourth Ally: Romanian Armed Forces in the European War,
19411945. London: Arms and Armour
Press, 1995.
Butler, Rupert. Hitlers Jackals. Barnsley, UK:
Leo Cooper, 1998.
Ceausescu, Ilie, Florin Constantiniu, and Mihail
E. Ionescu. A Turning Point in World War II:
23 August 1944 in Romania. New York:
Columbia University Press, 1985.
Goralski, Robert, and Russell W. Freeburg. Oil
and War: How the Deadly Struggle for Fuel
in WWII Meant Victory or Defeat. New
York: William Morrow, 1987.
Hazard, Elizabeth W. Cold War Crucible:
United States Foreign Policy and the Conflict in Romania, 19431953. New York:
Columbia University Press, 1996.
Ioanid, Radu. Holocaust in Romania: The
Destruction of Jews and Gypsies under the
Antonescu Regime, 19401944. Chicago:
Ivan R. Dee, 2000.

Romanian Campaign in Hungary,


1919
Romania entered World War I on August 27,
1916, mesmerized by Entente promises of
Austro-Hungarian territories including
Bukovina, Temesvar, and Transylvania. The
Central Powers invasion of Romania in the
fall of 1916 dimmed these expectations,
and the surrender of Romania to the Central
Powers with the Treaty of Bucharest of 1918
ended them. The collapse of AustriaHungary in October 1918 revived Romanian
hopes. Romania reentered the war on

November 9 on the side of the Entente. The


Romanians acted quickly to occupy the
Austro-Hungarian lands promised to them
by the Entente.
In March 1919, a Communist government
under Bela Kun (18861938?) took power in
Hungary. The Romanian army advanced
against Kuns forces with the approval of
the Allied powers, then meeting in Paris.
By April 30, the Romanians, meeting little
resistance, reached the Tisza River. In July,
however, the Hungarians counterattacked
and threw the Romanians back from the
river. The Romanians responded with a
renewal of their offense. They crossed the
Tisza on August 1, 1919, and two days
later entered Budapest. That same day, Bela
Kun resigned. Within days, the Romanians
had occupied all of Hungary except for
some areas around Lake Balaton.
While in Hungary, the Romanians availed
themselves to large quantities of Hungarian
property, including food, machinery and railroad rolling stock. With Kun and the Communist government gone, the Entente ceased to
support the Romanian presence in Hungary.
The Romanians conduct in Hungary caused
the Entente Powers to pressure them to
leave. Beginning in mid-November 1919, the
Romanian army began to evacuate Hungary
and gradually returned to the line established
by the Treaty of Trianon in March 1920. The
campaign in Hungary cost the Romanians
around 11,600 casualties, and any chance for
a peaceful relationship with that country.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Romania in World War I; Trianon,
Treaty of, 1920

Further Reading
Hitchins, Keith. Rumania, 18661947.
Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1994.

Romanian Campaign in Hungary, 19441945


Torrey, Glenn. The Romanian Battlefront in
World War I. Lawrence: University Press
of Kansas, 2011.
Torrey, Glenn. The Romanian Intervention in
Hungary, 1919. In Glenn E. Torrey, Romania and World War I. Iasi: Center for Romanian Studies, 1998.

Romanian Campaign in Hungary,


19441945
This campaign by the Romanian army,
alongside the Soviet army, in Hungary after
the Romanian king Michael I (1921) overthrew the pro-Nazi regime of Ion Antonescu
(18821946) in August 1944 and declared
war on the Axis powers.
On August 23, 1944, King Michael I
deposed Antonescus government and, soon
afterward, declared war on the Axis powers
as the Soviet army advanced on the Moldavian front. Michael then placed the Romanian army, numbering a million men, on
the Allied side to defend Romania. These
actions split the Romanian army in two,
with units that still supported Germany and
those that supported the new government.
On August 24, German troops attempted to
seize Bucharest, Romanias capital. However,
Romanian forces stopped the Germans at the
citys defenses. Romanian units then forced
the German garrisons at the Ploesti oilfields
to retreat to Hungary. The coup accelerated
the Soviet armys advance into Romania but
did not prevent the Soviet army from capturing about 130,000 Romanian soldiers who
were taken to the Soviet Union, where many
perished in prison camps. Michael signed an
armistice on September 12, 1944, in which
he announced Romanias unconditional surrender to the Soviet Union and occupation
by the Soviet army.
Romanias declaration of war on Germany almost immediately led to border

clashes between Hungarian and Romanian


troops. In early September, Soviet and
Romanian forces entered Transylvania and
captured several small towns as they
advanced toward the Mures River and Cluj,
the historical capital of Transylvania. On
October 11, Soviet and Romanian forces
captured Cluj after a monthlong battle
against the Hungarians and the German
Eighth Army. Between September 14 and
17, the Hungarian army fought the Romanians in the battle of Paulis. The Hungarians
made some initial gains, but the Romanians
soon stopped the Hungarian advance. Soon
afterward, a combined Romanian-Soviet
counterattack overwhelmed the Hungarians,
who retreated back to Hungarian territory
on September 21.
In late October 1944, the advancing
Soviet army with Romanian units advanced
toward the Hungarian capital, Budapest,
defended by Hungarians and Germans. On
November 7, Soviet and Romanian troops
entered the citys eastern suburbs. By
December 29, the Soviets and Romanians
had completely encircled the city, and the
battle for the city turned into a siege. With
the city in ruins, the remaining defenders
surrendered to the Soviets on February 15,
1945. The Romanian army ended the war
fighting alongside the Soviet army against
the Germans in Transylvania, Hungary,
Yugoslavia, Austria, and Czechoslovakia.
Robert B. Kane
See also: Antonescu, Ion (18821946); Iron
Guard; Michael I, King of Romania (1921);
Romania, Invasion of, 1944; Romania in
World War II

Further Reading
Case, Holly. Between States: The Transylvanian Question and the European Idea
during World War II. Stanford, CA:
Stanford University Press, 2009.

249

250

Romanian Coup, August 1944


Ceausescu, Ilie, Florin Constantiniu, and
Mihail E. Ionescu. A Turning Point in
World War II: 23 August 1944 in Romania.
Boulder, CO: East European Monographs,
1985.
Georgescu, Vlad, ed. Romania 40 Years
(19441984). New York: Praeger, 1985.
Hitchins, Keith. Rumania, 18661947.
Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1994.

Romanian Coup, August 1944


On August 23, 1944, King Michael (1921)
of Romania ordered the arrest of Prime Minister Ion Antonescu (18821946), the fascist
dictator (conducta tor) of Romania since
September 5, 1940. The timing of the coup
was forced by the rapid successful invasion
of Romania by the Soviet army, which had
begun on August 20, 1944. King Michael
immediately named as interim prime minister Constantin Sanatescu (18851947), a
trusted general who had been conspiring
with King Michael and others against Antonescu. The new Romanian government
immediate sought to end the war with the
Soviet Union and switched Romania to the
side of the Allies.
After more than a decade of unstable governments and international crises, General
Ion Antonescu took over the dictatorial
power of King Carol II (18931953) on September 5, 1940. Taking the title of conductator (leader), Antonescu forced the
abdication of King Carol II to his son, King
Michael, who remained as monarch the
symbolic leader of the military and head of
state with powers to appoint the prime minister. Under Antonescu, Romania signed
the Tripartite Pact of the Axis powers on
November 23, 1940, and joined in Germanys invasion of the Soviet Union on
June 22, 1941. By late 1943, the war was
going poorly for Germany and numerous

Romanian political opposition groups,


important military leaders, and even Antonescu were seeking a way to extricate
Romania from the war. The National
Democratic Bloc was formed on June 20,
1944, a political conspiracy and alliance
dedicated to the removal of Antonescu and
an end to war with the Allies. The conspiracy consisted of King Michael and his
advisors, royalist military leaders such
as General Constantin Sanatescu, head
of the Royal Military House and commander
of the Romanian Fourth Army since
March 1943, and the leaders of several
opposition parties including Iuliu Maniu
(18731953) of the National Peasants
Party, Gheorghe Bratianu (19891953)
of the National Liberal Party, Constantin
Titel Petrescu (18881957) of the Social
Democratic Party, and Lucretiu Patrascanu
(19001954) of the Communist Party.
During June and July 1944, Germany weakened its forces in Romania, causing those
hostile to Antonescu to become by early
August more confident in their ability to
remove his regime without interference
from Germany.
On August 20, 1944, the Soviet Union
launched an offensive invading Romania
that quickly overwhelmed the weakened
German and Romanian armies. With reports
of a military collapse in progress, the conspiracy met on August 21 and set August 26,
1944, as the date to seize control of the
government from Antonescu and from the
German forces in Romania. With the Soviet
army advancing rapidly in the direction of
Bucharest, the capital of Romania, Antonescu met with King Michael in his palace
on August 23, 1944. Antonescu declared
his intentions to negotiate with Germany
for release of Romania from its treaty with
the Axis and to seek protection and guarantees from the Western Allies against Soviet

Romanian Peasant Uprising

occupation. With neither possibility being


even remotely realistic, King Michael ordered
his palace guard to arrest Antonescu. Later
that evening, King Michael broadcast to the
country that Antonescu had been removed,
that all fighting with the Allies was to cease,
and he had named General Constantin Sanatescu the interim prime minister.
There was no organized domestic resistance to the removal of Antonescu and the
political leaders of the National Democratic
Bloc were given government ministerial
positions. Any threat of Germany countering
the coup ended after a few days of failed
efforts to take control of the capital
(August 24August 28) by the German Luftwaffe General Alfred Gerstenberg (1893
1959) commanding a motorized detachment
of approximately 2,000 men (as well as antiaircraft guns) from the Fifth Flak Division
based in Ploesti. Attempts to reinforce Gerstenbergs force with the Brandenburg parachute battalion (stationed in occupied
Yugoslavia) from August 24 to August 26
failed completely. By August 31, 1944, the
Soviet army had entered Bucharest.
Pressured by the Allies and with German
forces attempting to seize Bucharest, the
new government declared war on Germany
on August 24, 1944, the day after the coup.
By August 31, 1944, the Soviet army and
Romanian army had eliminated all German
resistance in Romania. Ion Antonescu had
been in the custody of the Communist elements of the conspiracy before being given
to the Red Army on August 30, which then
transferred him to Moscow. Antonescu was
later returned to Romania to stand trial and
was executed on June 1, 1946.
Brian G. Smith
See also: Antonescu, Ion (18821946); Michael
I, King of Romania (1921); Romania, Invasion
of, 1944; Romania in World War II

Further Reading
Axworthy, Mark, Cornel Scafes, and Cristian
Craciunoiu. Third Axis, Fourth Ally: Romanian Armed Forces in the European War,
19411945. London: Arms and Armour
Press, 1995.
Erickson, John. The Road to Berlin: Stalins
War with Germany. Vol. 2. New Haven,
CT: Yale University Press, 1999.
Jelavich, Barbara. History of the Balkans.
Vol. 2, Twentieth Century. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 1983.

Romanian Peasant Uprising


The peasant uprising of 1907 was one of the
most violent uprisings in Romanian history.
The uprising, which started in February in
northern Moldavia and later spread throughout the country, lasted until mid-April and
was a result of long-standing dissatisfaction
with the inability of the government to
improve the position of peasants. The peasant population increased during the nineteenth century, but the plots that were
subdivided through inheritance were too
small to support them. The position of peasants deteriorated further when the rents on
property rose sharply by the end of the nineteenth century. Most peasants owned no
land, did not benefit from the export of
crops that they produced, and had no real
voting power.
Prior to the peasant uprising of 1907,
there were several peasant revolts and several attempts at reform, all of which failed
to achieve the desired results because of
their inefficiency and economic and financial difficulties of the state. Several factors
worsened the situation of peasants. The population increase did not go hand in hand
with mechanization of agriculture or use of
new techniques and fertilizers. Instead, the

251

252

Russo-Ottoman War, 18061812

peasants continued to rely on wooden plows


and oxen. Inheritance laws in place supported the equal division of land among all
the children, and as a result, many children
were left with tiny plots insufficient to feed
the young families. Buying additional or
new land was not easy to achieve, since the
money landing conditions were not favorable and resulted in greater indebtedness.
Taxes became increasingly burdensome
after Romanian independence and into the
early twentieth century, and even those
peasants who managed to acquire land
from previous Turkish landowners had to
make excruciatingly high payments. The
government attempted to implement limited
measures concerning agricultural contracts;
for example, it allowed the sale of stateowned property to landless peasants in
1891, but these were ineffective measures
in practice. The Jewish question also generally came up in the context of rural social
problems, though the evidence on the role
of anti-Semitism and xenophobia in the
uprising is inconclusive.
All of economic and social factors were
the main reasons of the peasant uprising of
1907. The revolt was triggered by a refusal
of one landlord to renew peasants land
leases. Fearing loss of work and livelihood,
peasants started to act violently, and the
revolt spread. Several landlords were killed
and their property destroyed in the following
weeks. Dimitrie Sturdzas (18331914)
government declared the state of emergency
on March 19, 1907, in hopes of containing
the revolt, and it used military force to
crush the revolt with brutality in the following month. Some 11,000 peasants were
killed in the uprising, and an equal number
of peasants were arrested. The precise
numbers are still debatable because all
records were intentionally destroyed by the
government. Even though some laws were

passed to pacify the peasants after the


revoltfor example, to establish a rural
bank to aid peasants in purchasing land
most reforms were insufficient and were
brought to a complete halt by the onset of
World War I. Presumably, the uprising demonstrated that the peasant situation and land
distribution had to be of primary importance
for the Romanian government. But because
the reforms were delayed, the economic
transformation failed to take off prior
to 1914. Consequently, the revolt did not
produce lasting results.
Irina Mukhina
See also: Aversecu, Alexandru (18591938);
Carol I, King of Romania (18391914);
Romania in the Balkan Wars

References
Hitchins, Keith. Rumania, 18661947.
Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1994.
Jelavich, Charles, and Barbara Jelavich. The
Establishment of the Balkan National
States, 18041920. Seattle: University of
Washington Press, 2011.
Palairet, Michael R. The Balkan Economies c.
18001914: Evolution without Development. Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 2003.
Treptow, Kurt W., ed. A History of Romania.
Iasi: Center for Romanian Studies, 1996.

Russo-Ottoman War, 18061812


The Russo-Ottoman War of 18061812
began with the Russian invasion of Moldavia in December 1806. Even though the
war was fought for control of the Danube
River, which was the psychological and strategic barrier between the two empires, the
course of the war as a whole reflects contemporary developments unfolding in Europe at
that time.

Russo-Ottoman War, 18061812

Prior to 1806, French diplomacy had been


gaining superiority over the coalition in
Istanbul. However, the existing Ottoman
neutrality that enabled Russian warships to
pass freely through the straits was crucial
for the ascendancy of the coalition in the
Mediterranean. This was the main motivation behind the ineffective British expeditions to the straits and to Egypt in 1807. On
the other hand in the Balkans, the Russian
army had steadily improved. With the help
of the Serbs, they took Walachia and Moldavia in the course of a six-week campaign.
The condition of the Ottoman army was
deplorable. The Ottoman expeditionary
forces were a kind of horde, being little
more than a conglomeration of mercenary
troops provided by the local magnates.
Moreover, the fragmentation of the Ottoman
army was worsened by rebellions in the
capital in 1807 and 1808. More than
100,000 Ottoman soldiers were mobilized
on paper. Nevertheless the only effective
Ottoman resistance against the Russian
forces came from the local levies. The Russian advances threatened not only the Ottoman territorial integrity but also the
semiautonomous positions of the local Ottoman notables.
Even so, the Russian army was not in
especially good condition, either. The Sublime Porte was not able to find men to mobilize, but the relatively small Russian army
under the command of General Ivan I.
Michelson (17401807) was suffering, like
the Ottomans, from epidemics, insufficient
medical facilities, and hunger. As a result,
by the end of 1807, the lines between the
Ottoman and Russian forces had stabilized.
But in 1809, Russia once more went on the
offensive with the aim of achieving their
ultimate goal of crossing the Danube. In
this operation, the Ottomans abandoned
Ruse (Ruscuk), Nicopolis (Nigbolu), and

Sistova to the Russian forces under the command of Count Mikhail Kamensky (1738
1809). Still, the losses incurred proved too
great, even for so large an empire as Russia.
The regions controlled by the disloyal or
volatile notables were among the primary
targets of the Russian forces. In the spring
of 1811, General Mikhail Kutuzov (1745
1813), who had been promoted to the command of the Moldavian army on the Danube,
took the stage. This development, which
seems to have been a precaution against the
incoming French army, changed the theater
of war dramatically. This time the Ottomans
went on the offensive, attacking Ruscuk in
order to cut off Russian access to the
Danube in what proved to be the largest confrontation of the entire war. Nevertheless, at
the end of 1811, General Kutuzov, under
pressure from Czar Alexander I (1777
1825), crossed the Danube and directly
attacked the Ottoman forces. By October 25,
1811, a cease-fire had been agreed upon, and
in the following year, a treaty was signed in
Bucharest. With the enactment of the treaty,
however, the Sublime Porte lost control over
the Pruth River.
Fatih Yesil
See also: Russo-Ottoman War, 18281829;
Serbian War of Independence, 18041817

Further Reading
Aksan, Virginia H. Ottoman Wars 17001870:
An Empire Besieged. London: Pearson
Longman, 2007.
Mikhailovsky-Danilevsky, Alexander Ivanovich. Russo-Turkish War of 1806-1812.
Edited and translated by A. Mikaberidze.
West Chester: The Nafziger Collection,
2002.
Shaw, Stanford J., and Ezel Kural Shaw. History of the Ottoman Empire and Modern
Turkey. Vol. 2, Reform, Revolution and
Republic: The Rise of Modern Turkey

253

254

Russo-Ottoman War, 18281829


18081975. Cambridge:
University Press, 1977.

Cambridge

Russo-Ottoman War, 18281829


During the Greek Revolt (18211826), the
European Powers had forced the Ottoman
government to recognize the Greek privileges. Russia was also determined to enforce
the unfinished stipulations of the Treaty of
Bucharest (1812), especially those about
Serbia and the Danubian Principalities.
Upon the denial of their demands by Sultan
Mahmud II (17851839), the combined
French, British, and Russian fleet destroyed
the Ottoman-Egyptian navy at Navarino in
1827. As a consequence of the persistent
unwillingness of Sultan Mahmud II to negotiate peace, Czar Nicholas (17961855)
declared war on April 14, 1828. In fact,
both sides had valid reasons to avoid a military confrontation. Following the abolition
of Janissary Corps in June 1826 and the
sinking of its fleet at Navarino, the Ottoman
goverment was rebuilding its army and
navy. On the other hand, the czar was afraid
of an alliance between his enemy and other
European Powers.
Nevertheless, the war broke out in
May 1828 when the Russians advanced into
the Danubian Principalities in the West and
the Caucasian mountains in the East. On
April 25, 1828, the VI and VII Corps of the
Russian Second Army crossed the Prut
River into Moldavia, while in Caucasus,
General Ivan F. Paskevich (17821856)
marched with his troops on Kars. Shortly
thereafter, a Russsian amphibious operation
captured the Ottoman Black Sea fortresses
at Anapa and Poti. Transported by boats
of local Cossacks on the northern Danube,
the Russians first crossed the Danube at
Satunovo in early May. The Ottoman

commander Agha Huseyin Pasha (1776


1849) left Istanbul with his army in late
May and reached Shumla, the Ottoman
headquarters on the Danubean front, by
early June. A bitter rivalry between Husrev,
the commander in chief of the newly established Ottoman central army (Asakir-i Mansure) and Grand Vizier Mehmed Selim
(17711831) kept the two best commanders
of Ottoman troops close to the sultan in
Constantinople. With Kars surrendered at
the end of June, the Ottoman operational
base in the Eastern Front was cut in two.
The next target was the semiautonomous
principality of Akhaltzikhe. The Ottoman
Eastern Army could not prevent Paskevich
and retreated to the fortress. After bombings
and street fightings between August 13 and
16, Akhaltzikhe capitulated. Ardahan, Beyazid, Diyadin, and Eleshkirt fell consequently. On the Danubean front, Russians
found Bucharest devastated after occupying
it in mid-May 1828. The Ottomans in the
Balkan theater remained in their fortresses
and avoided battle in the open field. They
limited operations to attacks on isolated
units and on Russian supply lines. In fact,
the Russian war command was not in favor
of an immediate Balkan mountain crossing
and a decisive offensive to Istanbul until
the their reserves arrived. The initial Russian
plan was to defeat the main Ottoman forces
at Shumla and take the fortresses of Ibrail,
Silistra (Silistre), and Varna by siege.
Czar Nicholas I joined the invading army
in early June. The siege of Ibrail began a
week later. In spite of the use of heavy
siege artillery, the Ottoman garrison resisted
43 days and surrendered on June 23 after
Machin had capitulated. Meanwhile, the
Ottoman Danube fleet lost 13 gunboats to
Russian flotilla fire and was forced to retire
to Ruschuk. Shortly thereafter, the Ottoman
fortresses such as Hirsova, Isakch, Tulcea,

Russo-Ottoman War, 18281829

and Kostence capitulated. In surrendering


the fortifications, the Ottomans supplied
their enemy with much-needed stores.
Afterward, the main Russian army proceeded against Varna via Bazarcik. The
Ottoman garrison in Varna repulsed the first
Russian assualt. On July 20, the czar
marched at the head of his entire army on
the road to Shumla, which was a wellfortified and well-supplied fortress. The
attacking Russians lost many men and
horses due to hunger, exhaustion, and Ottoman counter attacks.
The czar subsequently left the theater of
war for Odessa. In autumn, the arrival of
reinforcements allowed the Russians to
invest the northern side of the fortress. The
Russian fleet reached Varna the first week
of August and captured two Ottoman ships
when a third sunk. On September 28, the
Ottoman relief force sent from Shumla
forced a Russian witdrawal at the battle of
Kurttepe. On October 10, however, the Russians captured Varna, but they were not able
to force the surrender of Silistra (Silistre).
Due to Ottoman assaults and cold weather,
the Russians lost 2,000 of 25,000 men and
lifted the siege in November. In the winter
break of the war, Ottomans made attacks
on forces left at the garrisons. The Russians,
on the other hand, burnt the Ottoman Danubean flotilla and captured Suzebolu in the
south of Burgas.
In the spring of 1829, the second scene of
the war begun and the Russian forces sieged
Silistre once again. Instead of remaining at
defense, Grand Vizier Reshid Mehmed
Pasha (17801839) had surprisingly decided
to march with his main army out of Shumla
and attack the avant-garde of the Russian
center barring the route to Varna and
Silistra. They clashed as eski-Arnautlar,
where the Russians inflicted heavy losses
on the Ottomans. The new Russian field

commander, General Hans Karl von Diebitsch (17851831), moved from Silistra to
Pravadi. Reshid Pasha intended to mount
another flank attack to cut off the Russian
forces at Varna and then head north to
relieve the besieged forces of Silistra. Summoning the Russian troops from Varna to
Kozluca, Diebitsch barred the Grand
Viziers passage on the Pravadi road back
to Shumla and closed the pass of Kulevcha.
The Ottoman soldiers, charging impetuously
at first, soon dispersed following a Russian
artillery barrage and turned the battle into
a rout.
However, the new Turkish commanders
willingness to give battle played into
Russian hands. A six-week siege of Silistra
resulted in the capitulation of the garrison
on June 18. The Russians decided on
July 13, 1829, to bypass Shumla, cross the
Balkan mountain range and aim for Edirne.
At the same time, the Russian navy captured
Burgas. Aydos fell by July 26. But weakness
in the Russian forces and logistical system
cut the offensive short just as they captured
Edirne mid-August 1829.
On the Eastern Front, Russian and Ottoman troops confronted before the surrender
of Erzurum. Attacking the weak center of
the Ottoman army, Russians cut the front
into two. Finally, on July 27, 1829, the Ottoman headquarters on the eastern front, Erzurum, capitulated without a fight. Then
Paskevich defeated the Ottoman forces
around Gumushane and took the fortress.
There, however, Paskevichs regular and
militia forces were defeated at Bayburt by
the local Laz militia. The well-defensed
and naturally fortified Trabzon remained
out of Paskevichs successful captures, such
as Batum and Sivas. General Diebitsch was
within a days march or two of Edirne in
the west when the Ottoman grand vizier proposed an armistice. Following the retreat of

255

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Russo-Ottoman War, 18771878

Ottoman forces, Edirne capitulated on


August 20 without a fight.
The Ottomans admitted defeat in midAugust by acquiescing to the Treaty of London (1827) and the Convention of Akkirman
(1826). However, only after an additional
show of force by Diebitsch, the Treaty of
Adrianople was signed by the two sides on
September 14, 1829. By this treaty, the Prut
remained the European Russo-Ottoman frontier, but Russian acquired all the islands of
the very mouth of the Danube. Many of the
great fortresses of the Ottomans on the lower
Danube, including Ibrail, Tulcea, Isakchi,
Machin and Kostence, were to be destructed.
Thus the Ottoman first line of defense became
the Balkan Mountains rather than the Danube
itself. In Caucasus, the border ran along the
edges of the pashaliks of Akhaltzikhe, Trabzon, Kars and Erzurum.
Other treaty stipulations forced the Ottoman recognition of the Treaty of London
(July 6, 1827) laying out the settlement of
the Greek question, as well as of the
independence of Wallachia and Moldovia,
although the fictive connection of those
Principalities to the Ottomans was maintained. Serbias freedom was also guaranteed. With the agreement of March 22,
1829, ensuring the enforcement of the stipulations of the London Treaty, Greek
independence was guaranteed, six districts
were left to Serbians, the privileges of Principalities had changed. Again by this treaty,
the Russian merchant ships acquired freedom of trade in the Black Sea and passage
through the Straits. These gains cost the
Russians 140,000 men and 50,000 horses
during this war, mainly due to epidemics
and famine.
Gultekin Yildiz
See also: Greek War of Independence, 1821
1832; Navarino, Battle of, 1827

Further Reading
Aksan, Virginia H. Ottoman Wars 17001870:
An Empire Besieged. London: Pearson
Longman, 2007.
Allen, W. E. D., and Paul Muratoff. Caucasian
Battlefields: a History of the Wars on the
Turco-Caucasian Border 18281921. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1953.
Bitis, Alexander. Russia and the Eastern Question: Army, Government, and Society 1815
1833. New York: Oxford University Press,
2006.
Yildiz, Gu ltekin. Neferin Ad Yok: Zorunlu
Askerlige Gecis Surecinde Osmanl Devletinde Siyaset, Ordu ve Toplum (1826
1839). Istanbul: Kitabevi, 2009.

Russo-Ottoman War, 18771878


The last of a series of conflicts between the
Russian and Ottoman Empires resulted
from Russian expansionism and Ottoman
decline. These conflicts were part of a continuing crisis in which Balkan instability
growing out of the decline of the Ottoman
Empire threatened the peace of Europe.
They grew out of Russias drive to secure
her southern borders and dominate the
Balkans. In addition, the Russians sought to
regain losses they had sustained in the
Crimean War of 18531856. The Portes
decline and ethnic tensions in her Balkan
provinces fueled Russian ambitions.
The immediate cause of the 18771878
war was the Russian desire to aid the Balkan
rebellions of 1875 and 1876 against Ottoman rule. The crisis erupted in 1875 with
scattered peasant rebellions in Bulgaria
the poorest and most exploited of the Ottoman Empires Balkan possessionsand
was fanned with an ill-considered attack by
Serbia against the Ottomans in Bosnia in
the summer and early fall of 1876, which
the Ottomans swiftly crushed. Despite

Russo-Ottoman War, 18771878

Serbias defeat, the revolts in Bulgaria intensified throughout the rest of 1876 and into
1877. Turkish forces carried out wholesale
massacres that inflamed public opinion
throughout Europe and Great Britain and
led to growing demands in Russian Slavophil and Nationalist circles for Czar
Alexander II (18181881) and his advisers
to act.
On April 24, 1877, after several months of
diplomatic maneuvering in which the Russians gained the acquiescence of Germany
and Austria-Hungary and the active support
of Romania, Russia formally declared war
on Turkey. The Russian plan called for a
force of 250,000 men to push through
Romania, cross the Danube upstream of the
main Turkish forces, pass through the Balkan Mountains, and seize Adrianople before
advancing on the Ottoman capital at Constantinople. They also launched a diversionary offensive in the Caucuses to prevent the
Turks from reinforcing their Balkan armies
with troops from Asia Minor. A quick victory was vital. A prolonged war meant intervention by the other European powers and a
strain on Russias economy.
The Russian campaign was unexpectedly
held up by the stubborn Turkish defense of
Plevna (Pleven) in west central Bulgaria.
Plevens strategic importance lay in its locations at the crossroads linking Bulgarias
vital roadways. Continuing Ottoman possession of the city constituted a grave threat to
Russian supply and communication lines.
Three timestwice in July and once in September 1877the Russians assaulted
Pleven only to be repulsed with heavy losses
and forced to lay a siege to it. At the same
time, the Russian army crossed the Ottoman
border in eastern Anatolia and captured
Ardahan, Bayazid, Kars, and Erzurum.
In late November 1877, after a fivemonth-long siege, Pleven surrendered to

the Russian army, which crossed the Balkan


Mountains and occupied Sofia on January 4,
1878 and Adrianople (Edirne) on January 20.
It now lay in a position to directly threaten
Constantinople, and Russian advance to the
Ottoman capital provoked a British response.
Britain intervened pressuring the Russians to
negotiate a truce with the Turks. The Russians
accepted a cease-fire on January 31 but continued advancing toward Constantinople.
The British responded by sending a naval
task force to the Sea of Marmara. Although
incensed by Britains action, Russia was
alarmed by the British presence around Constantinople and, to avoid a pan-European conflict, chose to seek armistice with the Turks.
The Russian army halted at San Stefano, just
a few miles from Constantinople.
Over the next few weeks, Russian and
Ottoman diplomats conducted negotiations
that resulted in the Treaty of San Stefano of
March 3, 1878. The treaty established an independent Greater Bulgaria, which the
Russians envisioned as a satellite state
through which they could control the Balkans. Bosnia-Herzegovina was granted
autonomy. Romania, Serbia, and Montenegro received independence and enlarged
at the expense of Ottoman territorial losses.
Alarmed by the expansion of Russian
power implicit in the San Stefano pact, the
European powers, led by Britain and
Germany, convened the Congress of Berlin
and forced Russia to accept modifications
in the treaty. The resulting Treaty of Berlin
gave Russia southern Bessarabia, Batumi,
Ardahan, and Kars as well as a vast war
indemnity (some 800 million French francs)
that the Porte was required to pay in the
ensuing years. It also broke up Greater Bulgaria into a smaller independent state,
placed Bosnia-Herzegovina under Austrian
protectorate, and recognized the independence of Serbia, Romania, and Montenegro.

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Russo-Ottoman War, 18771878

Russian ambitions were thwarted, but the


Berlin agreement left many issues, particularly Slavic nationalism and Austrian and
Russian ambitions in the region, unresolved.
The war had a profound impact on the Ottoman Empire, which lost 8 percent of its most
productive territory and some 20 percent of
its total population. The war also significantly
altered the demographics of the Ottoman state
since most of the Orthodox Christian population was lost. The Ottoman economy was
saddled with heavy reparations.
Walter F. Bell
See also: Berlin, Treaty of 1878; Pleven, Siege
of, 1877; San Stefano, Treaty of, 1878

Further Reading
Drury, Ian, and Raffael Ruggeri. The RussoTurkish War 1877. Oxford: Osprey, 1994.

Faroqhi, Suraiya, ed. The Cambridge History


of Turkey: The Later Ottoman Empire,
16031839. Vol. 3. Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 2006.
OConnor, M. P. The Vision of Soldiers:
Britain, France, Germany, and the United
States Observe the Russo-Turkish War.
War in History 4, no. 3 (July 1997):
26495.
Seton-Watson, R. W. Disraeli, Gladstone, and
the Eastern Question. New York: Macmillan, 1935.
Shaw, Stanford J., and Ezel Kural Shaw. History of the Ottoman Empire and Modern
Turkey. Vol. 2, Reform, Revolution and
Republic: The Rise of Modern Turkey,
18081975. Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 1977.

S
Saint-Germain, Treaty of, 1919

the territorial ambitions of the victors, notably Italy. The conferees at Paris had decided
on the creation of two new states in Czechoslovakia and Yugoslavia (South Slavia), the
territory of which was in large part formed
by land taken from the Dual Monarchy. In
drawing the frontiers of the new states,
where there was no clear line of nationality,
the dispute was to be settled in plebiscites.
The old Austro-Hungarian monarchy
dissolved into Austria and Hungary, but
its lands also went to Czechoslovakia,
Yugoslavia, Italy, Poland, and Romania.
The new Austria constituted the area
populated by the German-speaking inhabitants of the prewar Austria-Hungary.
Altogether, Austria lost about threequarters of the former Austrian territory in
the Dual Monarchy, excluding Hungarian
territory. Except for the confiscation of
Germanys colonies, this was the most
severe amputation of territory resulting
from the conference.
Romania gained Bukovina, which had
been annexed by Austria in 1775 and incorporated into Galicia. The conferees at
Paris did not take into account claims on
Bukovina by Ukrainians to the north and
Romanians to the south.
Italy gained Istria, the Trento, and the
whole of Friul, given to Austria in 1815,
and it received Trieste on the Dalmatian
coast. All of these were Italian-speaking
regions. Italy also gained the South Tyrol,
promised to it by the secret Treaty of
London of 1915, even though this clearly violated the principle of self-determination

The Treaty of Saint-Germain established


peace between the Allied and Associated
Powers and Austria. Signed at SaintGermain-en-Laye, in the suburbs of Paris,
on September 10, 1919, this treaty was the
product of the Paris Peace Conference, as
were the other treaties that complemented
the Treaty of Versailles with Germany. The
Treaty of Saint-Germain took effect on
July 16, 1920. Another treaty was signed at
Trianon with Hungary. Together, these two
treaties provided for the breakup of the
Dual Monarchy of Austria-Hungary and
undertook to settle the considerable problems that resulted from the dissolution of
the old Habsburg Empire. Some decisions
were also no doubt affected by the continuing
conflict with what the Allied Supreme Council called the Maximalist Government of
Russia (that is, the Bolshevik government),
such as when the council forced the
government of the new state of Poland to
accept a settlement of the Teschen dispute
imposed by the Allies. In theory, Austria was
made liable for reparations, but no money
was ever paid, as once more the Allies were
haunted by the specter of Bolshevik Revolution if the population was left destitute.
The drafters of the treaty with Austria had
to reconcile impossible objectives. They
were caught between the principle of selfdetermination of peoples championed by
U.S. president Woodrow Wilson (1856
1924), which sought to redraw the map of
Europe along lines of clear nationality, and

259

260

Saint-Germain, Treaty of, 1919

of peoples given that the area indisputably


had a German-speaking population of some
240,000. The South Tyrol included the strategically vital Brenner Pass.
Italy also claimed the port of Fiume
(Croat: Rijeka), which was not part of
the London agreement. This had been a matter of great dispute at the Paris Peace
Conference; indeed, Italian diplomats left the
conference for a time over it. No compromise
was reached over Fiume, which had been part
of the old Kingdom of Hungary.
The region of Galicia, with the old city of
Cracow, annexed by Austria after the first
Partition of Poland in 1772 and claimed by
Polish and Ukrainian nationalists in the nineteenth century, was entrusted to the Allied
powers, who eventually (1923) assigned it to
Poland over vehement Ukrainian opposition,
most notably in the city of Lwow (Ukrainian:
Lviv; German: Lemberg).
Czechoslovakia (or Czecho-Slovakia, as
it was then often called) did not coincide
precisely with the areas peopled by Czechs
and Slovaks. Northern Bohemia, where the
frontier with Germany was drawn, included
a substantial German-speaking minority,
the Sudeten Germans. Many had settled in
the Kingdom of Bohemia in the seventeenth
century, following the Thirty Years War.
Altogether, an estimated 3.5 million German
speakers were included in Czechoslovakia.
This infringement of the principle of selfdetermination had been implemented on
French insistence, with the argument that
the mountains of the Sudetenland provided
the only natural defensive barrier against
German invasion. Human geography clearly
conflicted with physical geography, but for
security reasons, physical considerations
prevailed.
The new Serb-Croat-Slovene State,
which was to become Yugoslavia, was
mainly formed from areas taken from

Hungary; however, under the Treaty of


Saint-Germain, Austria lost some Dalmatian
territory to it. The major bone of contention
was over southern Carinthia, the future
of which was to be decided by plebiscite.
A first plebiscite, in October 1920, favored
Austria, and a second was canceled, with
the whole area remaining Austrian.
The frontier with Hungary was also complex. Austria gained some territory that
had been part of the former Kingdom of
Hungary, notably the Burgenland, but
Hungarys protests were partially successful. The Allies accepted that the future of
the Burgenland should be decided by a
plebiscite, which was held in December 1921 and resulted in the main towns in
the east, including Sopron, remaining under
Hungarian control, while the rural areas to
the west went to Austria.
The major immediate problem, however,
was the future of the province of Teschen
(Polish: Cieszyn; Czech: Te s n), which
formed part of Silesia and had been a
Habsburg possession since 1526. It was disputed between the Czechs (it had been part
of the Kingdom of Bohemia in 1335) and
the Poles (who made up almost 55 percent
of the prewar population). The Allied
Supreme Council therefore deferred the
question for subsequent decision, but due to
skirmishes between the two nations in
1919, the council decided to organize a
plebiscite. This was never held, as the council, preoccupied over Polands difficulties
with Bolshevik Russia, imposed a partition
in July 1920 that left many Poles in the rich
industrial portion given to Czechoslovakia,
but no Czechs in the predominantly agrarian
area awarded to Poland.
Technically, settlement of the Teschen
question was omitted from the Treaty of
Saint-Germain. The victors embarrassment
over this dispute between two important

Sakarya River, Battle of, 1921

potential allies against German and Russian


expansionism, which prevented them from
incorporating the area into the treaty, nonetheless demonstrated the limits on their ability to redefine the map of the old disputed
areas in central and eastern Europe so as to
reconcile their own stated principle of
self-determination of peoples, the expectations of the nationalities liberated from
the Habsburg yoke, and security considerations, namely the need to contain Bolshevik
expansion and prevent a resurgence of
German power.
Austria itself was disarmed, with its
forces limited to 30,000 armed men. Article
88 of the treaty expressly prohibited union
with Germany, which many Austrians
favored (the so-called Anschluss), without
the unanimous consent of the League of
Nations. The Allies had managed to dismember and disarm the former Habsburg
Empire, but the Treaty of Saint-Germain
probably created at least as many problems
as it resolved.
Antoine Capet
See also: Little Entente

Further Reading
Almond, Nina, and Ralph Haswell Lutz, eds.
The Treaty of St. Germain: A Documentary
History of Its Territorial and Political
Clauses, with a Survey of the Documents
of the Supreme Council of the Paris Peace
Conference. Hoover War Library Publications, No. 5. Stanford, CA: Stanford
University Press, 1935.
MacMillan, Margaret. Paris, 1919: Six Months
That Changed the World. New York:
Random House, 2002.
Stadler, Karl. The Birth of the Austrian Republic, 19181921. Leyden: A. W. Sijthoff,
1966.
Swanson, John C. The Remnants of the Habsburg Monarchy: The Shaping of Modern

Austria and Hungary, 19181922. Boulder,


CO: East European Monographs, 2001.
The Treaties of Peace, 19191923. Vol. 1,
Containing the Treaty of Versailles, the
Treaty of St. Germain-en-Laye and the
Treaty of Trianon. New York: Carnegie
Endowment for International Peace, 1924.
The Treaty of Peace between the Allied and
Associated Powers and Austria. Together
with other Treaties, Agreements, &c.,
signed at Saint-Germain-en-Laye, September 10, 1919; and Declarations, Treaties,
and other Documents Relevant Thereto,
Signed at Paris, December 5 and 8, 1919,
and July 16, 1920, and at Se`vres, August 10,
1920. London: HMSO, 1921.

Sakarya River, Battle of, 1921


Sakarya River was a major battle of the
Greco-Turkish War of 19191922, known as
National Struggle in the Turkish historiography and as Asia Minor Catastrophe in the
Greek historiography. It was one of the longest battles in the Near East and lasted for
about 22 days (August 23September 13).
The Greeks had undertaken offensive
action to eliminate the Turkish nationalist
forces in the center of Anatolia. The Greek
offensive came to a halt, and Turkish forces
took the offensive initiative after this battle.
In summer 1921, Greek forces commenced
their attack with a great deal of encouragement by the British upon the Ankara
government to have the latter recognize the
Se`vres treaty of August 1920. Greeks took
their offensive positions in the west bank of
the Sakarya River against the Turks, who
were expecting them in the east bank. Both
sides fought fiercely, and during one of the
bloodiest moments of the battle, Mustafa
Kemal Pasha uttered his famous phrase:
No defense of line, but defense of ground,
and that ground is the entire homeland!

261

262

Salonika

The battle came to end on September 13


with the retreat of Greek forces. The Greeks
lost the offensive initiative, and both sides
prepared for a final showdown. Eventually
in AugustSeptember 1922, Turkish forces
drove the Greek armies out of Anatolia.
Greek- and Turkish-speaking Christians followed them. With the retreat of the Greek
army came the end of 4,000 years of
Hellenic civilization in Asia Minor.
Bestami S. Bilgic
See also: Greco-Turkish War, 19191922;
Kemal, Mustafa (18811938)

Further Reading
Mango, Andrew. Ataturk: The Biography of
the Founder of Modern Turkey. Woodstock,
NY: Overlook Press, 2000.
Pope, Nicole, and Hugh Pope. Turkey
Unveiled: Ataturk and After. London: John
Murray, 1997.

Salonika
Salonika (Greek: Thessalon iki; Bulgarian:
Solun; Turkish: Selanik) is the largest city
in the northern Aegean Sea littoral. It is a
major port and serves as an outlet for much
Balkan commerce. Since ancient times,
Salonika has been an important center of
urban development in southeastern Europe.
It was a significant city in the Roman and
Byzantine Empires, falling to the Ottomans
in 1430. In modern Balkan history, a number
of important events have occurred in and
around Salonika.
At the beginning of the twentieth century,
Salonika was capital of the Ottoman province
(vilayet) of Sela nik. It had a varied population consisting of Albanians, Armenians,
Bulgarians, Greeks, Turks, and others.
Ladino-speaking Sephardic Jews constituted
the largest single group among the citys
inhabitants. Geographically often considered

part of Macedonia, Salonika became the


object of national aspirations of the emerging
Balkan states. The Bulgarian/Macedonian
revolutionary organization IMRO (VMRO)
was founded in Salonika in 1893 by associates of the local Bulgarian high school. The
Committee for Union and Progress (Young
Turks), determined to modernize the Ottoman
Empire, originated there. One of the most
important Young Turks, who went on to
establish the modern Turkish Republic,
Mustafa Kemal Ataturk (18831938), was
born in Salonika.
Salonika became the objective of both
the Bulgarian and Greek armies during the
First Balkan War. The Greeks arrived on
November 8, 1912. The Ottoman authorities
promptly surrendered to them. The Bulgarians reached Salonika the next day. As no
formal agreement existed between the two
Balkan allies over the disposal of Ottoman
territories, contingents from both armies
established an uneasy condominium over
the city. The disposition of Salonika became
a major point of dispute between the Bulgarians and Greeks. The Bulgarians made
strong efforts to attract the Jewish population to their cause. Salonika became a
major cause of the outbreak of the Second
Balkan War on June 29, 1913. In the ensuing
fighting, the Greeks annihilated the isolated
Bulgarian military presence in the city and
assumed direct control.
During World War I, Salonika, again
became a focus of controversy and conflict.
At the end of September 1915, a combined
Central Powers force of two AustroHungarian armies, two Bulgarian armies,
and one German army launched an overwhelming attack upon Serbia. The Entente
sought a way to send support to beleaguered
Serbia. They accepted the invitation of
Greek prime minister Eleutherios Venizelos
(18641936) to utilize the port of Salonika

Salonika

Allied troops landing in Salonika from the


Dardanelles. After their withdrawal from
Serbia, the Allies reinforced the British army
fighting in the Balkans under General Sarrail.
(Reynolds and Taylor, Colliers Photographic
History of the European War, 1916)

to land supplies and troops. These would


then move up the Vardar River valley to
assist the Serbs. Two subsequent events
made this impossible. First, Venize los
resigned as prime minister on October 5,
1915. This made the British and French
Entente troops, who had begun to arrive
that very day, unwanted guests in neutral
Greek Salonika. Second, the Bulgarians,
moving southwesterly, cut off access to the
Serbs. They were forced to retreat across
the Albanian Alps to the Adriatic Sea. The
Bulgarians then pushed the British and
French troops back into Greek territory. Forbidden by the Germans to cross the Greek
frontier, the Bulgarians established strong
defenses that effectively blockaded the
Entente forces in and around Salonika. This

Macedonian Front remained relatively static


until the last months of the war.
Venizelos arrived into this uneasy situation
in Salonika on October 9, 1916. He then
established a pro-Entente provisional Greek
government there. This engendered a conflict
with the neutralist royal government in
Athens that became known as the National
Schism. Greece remained a divided country
until the Entente compelled King Constantine
(18681923) to abdicate on June 11, 1917,
in favor of his son Alexander (18931920).
The new Greek government subsequently
declared war on the Central Powers on
June 27, 1917. Greek forces then joined the
Entente along the Macedonian Front. Soon
after the end of the political crisis, a fire
destroyed much of the city on August 18,
1917. Salonika served as the main base for
the Entente offensive that broke through the
Macedonian Front at Dobro Pole in September 1918 and brought about the end of World
War I in southeastern Europe. After the failure of Greeces Anatolian venture, many
Greek-speaking refugees from Anatolia and
Thrace flooded into Salonika.
During World War II, German forces
occupied Salonika, while Bulgarians took
control of most of the hinterland. In
March 1943, the Germans began to deport
the Jewish population of Salonika to Auschwitz. Bulgarian troops assisted with collecting
Jews in the hinterland. The Germans sent
45,000 to the death camps. Slightly over
1,000 returned at the end of the war.
The Greek Civil War caused more refugees to seek shelter in Salonika. The Communist rebels were active in the areas to the
north of the city. The situation finally stabilized in 1949 with the defeat of the Communists. The victorious royal government often
conflated the Communists with the Slavic
Bulgarian and Macedonian peoples to the
north. This led to efforts to Hellenize the

263

264

San Stefano, Treaty of, 1878

Slavic populations of northern Greece. After


the collapse of Yugoslavia and the proclamation of Macedonian independence on
September 8, 1991, the Greek government
adopted a hostile attitude toward the new
state. In part this was based upon concerns
that the Macedonian government harbored
claims to the Greek part of historic Macedonia and the city of Salonika. While the
Macedonian government in Skoplje had
raised no such claims, as of this writing, relations between the two states remained remote.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Bulgaria in the Balkan Wars; Constantine I, King of Greece (18681923);
Greece in the Balkan Wars; Greek Civil War;
Holocaust in the Balkans; Macedonian Front,
19161918; National Schism (Greece), 1916
1917; Venize los, Eleuthe rios (18641936);
VMRO; Young Turks

Further Reading
Hall, Richard C. The Balkan Wars, 1912
1913: Prelude to the First World War.
London: Routledge, 2000.
Palmer, Alan. The Gardeners of Salonika. New
York: Simon and Schuster, 1965.
Mazower, Mark. Salonika, City of Ghosts.
New York: Vintage, 2006.
Stavrianos, L. S. The Balkans since 1453. New
York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1958.

San Stefano, Treaty of, 1878


The Treaty of San Stefano ended the RussoOttoman War of 18771878. Signed on
March 3, 1878, the treaty was highly favorable to Russia. It called for the creation of
the autonomous principality of Bulgaria,
whose territory would extend from the
Danube River to the Aegean Sea. Under
Article 7, a prince elected by the people
but approved by the sultan would rule over

Bulgaria, while Article 8 called for the


Ottoman evacuation of Bulgaria and deployment of Russian forces for two years. Russia
also compelled Turks to cede territory to
Montenegro and recognize its independence.
Serbia received the cities of Nis and Leskovac
and was granted independence as well. The
Porte was also forced to grant autonomy to
Bosnia-Herzegovina under Austrian and
Russian supervision and to recognize the
independence of Romania. In the Caucasus,
the Ottoman Empire lost Ardahan, Artvin,
Batum, Kars, Olti, and Beyazit to Russia.
The Straits of the Bosporus and the
Dardanelles were declared open to all neutral
ships in war and peacetime (Article 24).
The treaty, so advantageous to Russia, was
rejected by the Great Powers, notably Austria
and Britain, who were concerned about the
spread of Russian authority into the Balkan
Peninsula mainly through the establishment
of a large Bulgaria. The other Balkan states
also resented the creation of a large Bulgaria
in their midst. As tensions between the Great
Powers escalated, the German chancellor
Otto von Bismarck (18151898) negotiated a
new agreement at the Congress of Berlin in
June 1878 that was far less generous to the
Russians. Most profoundly affected by the
abrogation of the San Stefano treaty were Bulgarian nationalists. They had seen their maximum claims for a Bulgarian state realized at
San Stefano, only to suffer extreme disappointment at Berlin. The Berlin agreement
trisected their national state. In its stead
was an autonomous Bulgarian principality, a
self-governing Ottoman province, Eastern
Rumelia, under a Christian governor.
The remainder of San Stefano Bulgaria,
Macedonia, returned to direct Ottoman rule.
Thereafter, every Bulgarian government
adopted policies designed to realize the
reestablishment of the San Stefano frontiers.
Alexander Mikaberidze

Sarajevo, Siege of, 19921995


See also: Balkan Wars, 19121913, Causes;
Berlin, Treaty of, 1878

Further Reading
Crampton, R. J. Bulgaria 18781918.
Boulder, CO: East European Monographs,
1983.
Gleeny, Misha. The Balkans: Nationalism,
War and the Great Powers, 18041999.
New York: Viking, 1999.
Macfie, A. L. The Eastern Question 1774
1923. London: Longman, 1989.

Sarajevo, Siege of, 19921995


The siege of Sarajevo, a city in Bosnia,
began in April 1992, as the Yugoslav army
sought to prevent the independence of
Bosnia and Herzegovina. Though Sarajevo
was only one of many Yugoslavian cities to
be destroyed during that countrys dismemberment, the siege was tragic because of the
dedication its population had once shown to
peaceful coexistence and because of the
heroic defense that its citizens maintained.
The breakup of Yugoslavia began with
declarations of independence by Slovenia
and Croatia in 1991. Elections held in Bosnia
in December 1990 had resulted in the three
national communities (Serb, Croat, and
Bosniak Muslim) gaining seats in rough proportion to their populations. In a referendum
on independence held in early 1992, nearly
two-thirds of the Bosnia electorate cast a
vote; almost all voted for independence.
After Bosnia and Herzegovina declared its
independence in March 1992, a new, smaller
Yugoslavia was formed consisting of Serbia
and Montenegro. The Yugoslav army, supported by militias of Bosnia Serbs, began to
move into position around the city of
Sarajevo. When Bosnias independence was
recognized by the United States and the
European Community on April 6, Serb

paramilitary forces immediately began firing


on Sarajevo, and the bombardment of the
city by heavy artillery began soon thereafter.
Thousands of people were killed and
wounded and many buildings were
destroyed. The Serbs deliberately attacked
monuments and institutions associated with
the Muslim culture. Thus they shelled and
burned to the ground the university library
containing thousands of irreplaceable manuscripts and gutted mosques and other cultural centers. The animals of the Sarajevo
Zoo starved to death.
In June 1992, UN peacekeeping forces
arrived in Bosnia and Herzegovina, but
their presence did not halt the fighting. The
people of Sarajevo showed amazing courage
during the siege, which continued for nearly
two more years until it was formally ended
by the Serbs in February 1994. In spite of
the Serbs public announcement that
the siege was over, attacks on Sarajevo
continued through 1995. In August 1995,
the North Atlantic Treaty Organization
(NATO) declared that if the Serbs did not
halt their attacks on Sarajevo and other
UN-protected areas, Bosnian Serb positions
would be attacked by NATO forces. When
Serb forces kept up their artillery shelling
of the city, NATO planes bombed the
Serbians. The NATO bombing halted in
September, when Serbia, Croatia, and
Bosnia and Herzegovina agreed to a peace
plan, the Dayton Agreement (1995), which
was signed in December in Dayton, Ohio.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Bosnian War, 19921995; Srebrenica Massacre, 1995; Yugoslav Wars, 1991
1995

Further Reading
Di Giovanni, Janine. The Quick and the Dead:
Under Siege in Sarajevo. London: Phoenix
House, 1995.

265

266

Sarajevo Assassination, 1914


Filipovic, Zlata. Zlatas Diary: A Childs Life
in Wartime Sarajevo. New York: Penguin,
2006.
Gjelten, Tom. Sarajevo Daily: A City and Its
Newspaper under Siege. New York:
HarperCollins, 1995.
Macek, Ivana. War Within: Everyday Life
in Sarajevo under Siege. Philadelphia:
University of Pennsylvania Press, 2009.

Sarajevo Assassination, 1914


The assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand (18631914) on June 28, 1914, was
the spark that eventually set off World War
I. Franz Ferdinand was disliked by many in
the Austrian government, but they were
quick to exploit his death to try to defuse a
situation that threatened to dismember the
empire. The Austrians failure to do so without a war resulted in the destruction of the
empire they attempted to save.
Franz Ferdinand became heir to the
Habsburg throne through a number of tragedies
that eliminated other members of the family.
He was not trained as a ruler but, like other
archdukes, had a military background. He was
married to Countess Sophie Chotek (1868
1914), who was not sufficiently royal to be
married to a Habsburg. She was forced to
accept a lower station at all official functions in
Austria. Franz Ferdinand was a devoted husband and father, although that side of his personality was largely hidden from the public.
Franz Ferdinand prepared to succeed
his uncle Franz Joseph I (18301916) by
studying the Austro-Hungarian Empires
problems. He recognized the growing disaffection of the Slavic minorities in the
southern part of the empire and the dangers
posed by Magyar obstruction in the Hungarian part of the empire. Since he did not come
to power, what his actual policies would
have been are not known.

Franz Ferdinand and his wife Sophie


Chotek (18681914) attended army maneuvers in Bosnia and Herzegovina in
June 1914. Their visit to Sarajevo during that
trip was highly publicized, and Franz
Ferdinand was targeted for assassination by
members of the Black Hand organization, a
terrorist group composed of radical Serb
nationalists. Black Hand membersled by
Colonel Dragutin Dimitrijevic (18761917),
also known as Apiswere pledged to destabilize the Austro-Hungarian Empire and the
Ottoman Empire in order to incorporate their
Serb population into a greater Serbia. Members had brutally murdered the reigning king
of Serbia in 1903. Franz Ferdinand posed a
threat to the Black Hand, since his goal
of strengthening the Austro-Hungarian
Empire was contrary to the Serbs desires.
An international crisis would also help Apis
in his battle against the existing Serbian
government for control of Serbia.
A group of youthful revolutionaries from
Bosnia were armed and trained by the
Black Hand and then sent to Sarajevo.
They lined the parade route used by Franz
Ferdinand and his wife. On the morning of
June 28, 1914, one conspirator threw his
bomb at their car, but it bounced off and
exploded near another car. The motorcade
continued to city hall, where the group
had lunch. During the return trip, Franz
Ferdinand wanted to visit the wounded in
the hospital, but the drivers were confused
about the route. When the archdukes car
turned the wrong way, it was right in front of
Gavrilo Princip, another conspirator. He
shot Franz Ferdinand and Sophie, and they
both died soon afterward.
The Austrian government used the death
of Franz Ferdinand as an excuse to send
an ultimatum to Serbia, designed to
cripple that states ability to cause trouble.
When the Serbs refused to comply, Austria

Sarkoy and Bolayir, Battles of, 1913

The suspected assassin of Archduke Franz Ferdinand, Gavrilo Princip, is hustled into
custody in Sarajevo in 1914. (The Illustrated London News Picture Library)

declared war. Both countries called on their


allies for help, which led to the outbreak of
World War I as Russia intervened on behalf
on Serbia and Germany assisted Austria.
Eventually, most of the worlds major
powers became embroiled in the war due to
further webs of alliance. Princip was captured
and imprisoned during the war, and the Black
Hand was destroyed when Dimitrijevic was
shot on trumped-up charges.
Tim J. Watts
See also: Austria-Hungary in the Balkans
during World War I; Black Hand; Dimitrijevic,
Dragutin (18761917); Princip, Gavrilo
(18941918)

Further Reading
Brook-Shepherd, Gordon. Archduke of Sarajevo:
The Romance and Tragedy of Franz Ferdinand of Austria. Boston: Little, Brown, 1984.
Cassels, Lavender. The Archduke and the
Assassin: Sarajevo, June 28th 1914. New
York: Stein and Day, 1985.

Feuerlicht, Roberta Strauss. The Desperate


Act: The Assassination of Franz Ferdinand
at Sarajevo. New York: McGraw-Hill,
1968.

Sarkoy and Bolayir, Battles of,


1913
Sarkoy (S arko y; Sarkoi) and Bolayir
(Bolayr; Bulair) were two battles in the
First Balkan War between Bulgaria and the
Ottoman Empire. The unexpected and
humiliating defeats suffered at the hands of
Balkan nations turned the politics of the
empire upside down. The disillusioned officer members of Committee of Union and
Progress (CUP) under the leadership Lieutenant Colonel Enver Pasha (18811922)
launched a raid, the so-called Raid on the
Sublime Porte of January 23, 1913, into
the offices of the prime ministry and forced
the government to resign. The new grand
vizier and minister of war, Mahmud Sevket

267

268

Savov, Mihail

Pasha (18561913), increased the efficiency


and influence of the military by immediately
assigning capable young officers to the
nerve centers of the large army staffs.
In addition to the coup detat, the armistice between December 3, 1912, and February 3, 1913, gave the Ottoman military
much needed rest and recovery time. All
available resources were mobilized, and
training became the main activity. The
arrival of fresh troops, ever increasing public
support, and the reverses of the Bulgarians
in front of the Chataldzha (Catalca) Line as
well as the heroic defenses of Edirne (Adrianople), Yanya (Janina) and Iskodra (Scutari) increased morale and confidence. Even
the enormous toll of the epidemics, including typhus and cholera, did not affect the
positive atmosphere.
The Ottoman General Staff took the initiative and displayed its offensive tendency by
planning the Sarkoy amphibious operation
against the Fourth Bulgarian Army in an
attempt to save Edirne by hitting the concentrated Bulgarian forces in front of Chataldzha
from behind. The plan was not only ambitious
and innovative, but it also demonstrated stateof-the-art staff work involving the technical
details of a combined army and navy operation. Regrettably, a series of unfortunate incidents and developments like weather,
technical failures, and communication and
coordination problems handicapped the operation. The Bulgarians offered determined resistance to both operations. The first leg of
the operation, the frontal assault of the Muretteb (provisional) Corps on the neck of the
Gallipoli Peninsula, died under the fire of
well-entrenched Bulgarian infantry supported
by massive coordinated artillery and machine
gun fire on February 8, 1913.
Nevertheless, the Sarkoy amphibious
landing succeeded in establishing beachheads against which recently reinforced

Bulgarian divisions launched uncoordinated


but effective assaults forcing termination of
the operation two days later on February 10.
The Ottoman units managed to break off contact and embark on ships with light casualties,
showing a rare combination of leadership,
discipline and courage.
Meanwhile at Bolayir on the Gallipoli
Peninsula, a strong Ottoman force attacked
the Bulgarians of the Seventh Rila Division.
The heavily outnumbered Bulgarians
repulsed repeated Ottoman attempts to drive
them off the peninsula. The Ottomans suffered huge losses. Among the Ottoman officers participating in the Bulair operation was
Mustafa Kemal (18811938), who would distinguish himself two years later in the same
location fighting in the opposite direction.
Mesut Uyar
See also: Balkan War, First, 19121913; Bulgaria in the Balkan Wars; Chataldzha, Battle
of, 1912; Enver Pasha (18821922); Ottoman
Empire in the Balkan Wars

Further Reading
Erickson, Edward J. Defeat in Detail: The
Ottoman Army in the Balkans, 19121913.
Westport, CT: Praeger, 2003.
Hall, Richard C. The Balkan Wars, 1912
1913: Prelude to the First World War.
London: Routledge, 2000.
Hikmet, Su er, TSK Tarihi Balkan Harbi
(19121913): Sark Ordusu Ikinci Catalca
Muharebesi ve Sarkoy C
karmas. Vol. 2,
section 2, book 2, 2nd printing. Ankara:
Genelkurmay Basmevi, 1993.
Hu snu , Ersu . 19121913 Balkan Harbinde
Sarkoy Ckarmas ve Bulayr Muharebeleri.
Istanbul: Askeri Matbaa, 1938.

Savov, Mihail (18571928)


Bulgarian lieutenant general Mihail Savov
was born on November 14, 1857, in Stara

Scutari, Siege of, 19121913

Zagora. He was educated in Constantinople,


Sofia, and at the Nikolaev General Staff
Academy in St. Petersburg. After the establishment of the Bulgarian principality in
1878, he served in the Eastern Rumelian
forces.
Following the unification of Bulgaria with
Eastern Rumelia in 1885, Savov began
Bulgarian service. That same year, he fought
in the 1885 Bulgarian-Serbian war as a captain. He distinguished himself in the Battle
of Slivnitsa. After the war he rose rapidly
in the military establishment. In 1887, he
was adjutant to the newly enthroned Prince
Ferdinand. From 1891 to 1894 and again
from 1903 to 1907, he served as minister of
war. Allegations of corruption resulted in
him leaving the army in 1908. Nevertheless
he was appointed deputy commander in
chief of the Bulgarian army at the outbreak
of the Balkan Wars in 1912.
In this capacity, Savov directed the army
for Czar Ferdinand, the constitutional commander in chief. He made two controversial
decisions. On November 16, 1912, he
ordered the exhausted and overextended
Bulgarian forces to assault the Ottoman
defensive lines at Chataldzha, 20 miles outside Constantinople. The attack failed with
heavy losses. Then on the night of June 29
30, on the authority of Czar Ferdinand, he
ordered local attacks on Serbian troops in
Macedonia. These, and attacks on Greek
troops, began the Second Balkan War.
The Bulgarian government sacked Savov
for this order. He subsequently commanded
the Bulgarian Fourth and Fifth Armies on
the southern front. Because of his notoriety,
he did not obtain another command. He
reluctantly sat out World War I in France
and then Austria. After the war, he served
as Bulgarian minister to France from 1920
to 1923. He died there in Saint-Vallier-de-

Thiey on August 19, 1928, and was subsequently buried in Sofia.


Richard C. Hall
See also: Balkan War, Second, 1913; Bulgaria
in the Balkan Wars; Chataldzha, Battle of,
1912; Kalimantsi, Battle of, 1913

Further Reading
Azimov, Dimitur. Bulgarski visshi voenachalnitsi prez Balkanskata i Purvata svetovna
voina. Sofia: Voenno izdatelstvo, 2000.
Nedev, Svetozar. Komandvatneto na Bulgarskata voinska prez voinite za natsionalno
obedinenie 1885, 1912, 1913, 1915, 1918.
Sofia: Sv. Georgi Pobedonosets, 1993.

Scutari, Siege of, 19121913


The siege of Scutari (Albanian: Shkode r;
Serb: Skadar; Turkish: Iskodra) was a prolonged engagement during the First Balkan
War, 19121913, between besieging Montenegrin and Serbian forces and Ottoman forces
within the city of Scutari. Scutari was the fortified seat of the Ottoman vilayet of the same
name. The population of the city and the
hinterland was overwhelmingly Albanian.
Scutari was the northern counterpart of
Janina, a fortified city on a lake. Lake Scutari
lay to the northwest of the city. Scutari was
also the main objective of the Montenegrin
army during the First Balkan War. Control of
Scutari would give the Montenegrins a
dominant position in northern Albania. At
the beginning of the war, the Scutari Corps
of around 13,600 men under the leadership
of Hasan Riza Bey commanded the Ottoman
forces.
Beginning on October 9, 1912, two
Montenegrin forces advanced on Scutari. The
15,000-man Zeta Division, under the command of Crown Prince Danilo (18711939),

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270

Selim III

moved around the eastern shore of Lake


Scutari. The 8,000 soldiers of the Coastal
Division, led by Brigadier Mitar Martinovic
(18701954), moved along the western shore
of the lake. The Zeta Division attacked the
Ottoman fortifications on October 24 and
again on October 28 with no success. A significant problem was the failure of the Coastal
Division to participate in the attacks. The
Montenegrins then settled into a siege.
On November 18, the Serbian Third
Army reached the Adriatic Sea at Alessio
(Albanian: Lezhe ; Serb: Ljes ). They then
assisted their Montenegrin allies around
Scutari with troops and artillery. During the
armistice, Scutari remained quiet. During
this time, on January 30, 1913, the Ottoman
commander Hasan Riza Bey (18711913),
was murdered in mysterious circumstances. Esat Pasha Toptani (18631920), an
Albanian nationalist, succeeded him. Soon
after the end of the armistice, the Montenegrins and Serbs undertook an assault on the
Ottoman positions. During the fighting,
from February 6 to February 9, 1913, they
failed to make significant gains. In the
wake of the defeat, the Serbs sent additional
troops and artillery to Scutari. Another
attack on 30-31 March 3031 failed.
Meanwhile in London, the AustroHungarians and Italians had insisted that
Scutari become a part of the newly independent Albanian state. The other Great Powers
agreed. A Great Power fleet including
Austro-Hungarian, British, French, German,
and Italian vessels arrived on April 2 off the
short Montenegrin coast to enforce this
decision. The Serbs withdrew their forces
eight days later. By this time, however, the
Ottomans were exhausted. After three days
of negotiations, the Ottoman commander
Esat Pasha Toptani then surrendered to the
Montenegrins on April 22. The Montenegrins entered the city on April 24, only to

leave under Great Power pressure on


May 5. The Montenegrins occupied the city
for less than two weeks. With the fall of
Scutari, fighting in the First Balkan War
was concluded.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Albania in the Balkan Wars; Balkan
War, First, 19121913; Montenegro in the
Balkan Wars; Serbia in the Balkan Wars

Further Reading
Durham, M. Edith. The Struggle for Scutari
(Turk, Slav, Albanian). London: Edward
Arnold, 1914.
Erickson, Edward J. Defeat in Detail: The
Ottoman Army in the Balkans, 19121913.
Westport, CT: 2003.
Hall, Richard C. The Balkan Wars, 1912
1913: Prelude to the First World War.
London: Routledge, 2000.

Selim III (17611808)


Ottoman sultan Selim III, the son of Mustafa
III (17171774), was born in Constantinople
on December 24, 1761. He ascended to the
Ottoman throne on April 7, 1789. As a
crown prince, he enjoyed unconventional
freedom and a distinctive education, and it
is likely that his acquaintance with the
world around the Ottoman Empire and his
future political agenda (the Nizam- Cedd
or New Order) were the product of these
formative years.
Selims enthronement coincided with the
war of 17881792 against the HabsburgRussian coalition. However, the war did not
prevent Selim from putting his political
agenda into action. On the contrary, the disastrous defeats suffered by the Ottomans,
especially at the hands of the Russian army,
were frequently referenced in the contemporary Ottoman political literature as a means

Serbia, Invasions of, 1914

of legitimizing the New Order. The ultimate


aim of the New Order was the creation of a
centralized and well-disciplined army,
which was expected not only to return the
Ottomans to their glory days of old, but
also to bring the unruly governors into line.
To achieve this goal, Selim III, initially
only in the capital, formed New Order regiments that were drilled by the European
noncommissioned officers s as well as establishing the first modern military school, the
Imperial School of Military Engineering.
For efficiencys sake, these regiments were
to be set up in Anatolia through the local
magnates called ayans. The increase in the
number of the troops, however, created
problems that could not be solved by the
existing Ottoman economic system. The
foundation of the new treasuries, like the so
called New Revenue, the Grain Treasury
and the Shipyard Treasury, to finance the
central army and navy resulted in devaluation and the deterioration of buying power.
Besides the economic problems, the establishment of a rival army to the Janissaries was
another source of disturbance. Catastrophic
developments in the Ottoman diplomacy further aggravated Selims situation. In 1798,
the unexpected invasion of Egypt by France,
the traditional ally of the empire, pushed
the Porte to ally with Russia and Britain.
This impossible alliance between London,
St. Petersburg, and Istanbul did not last long,
however, with the Russian invasion of the
principalities of Walachia and Moldavia in
1806 and the British expedition to Istanbul
and Egypt in 1807 ultimately determining
the fate of Selim III and his advisers.
A rebellion in the capital led by the artisans and the Janissaries in May 1807
resulted in the overthrow of the sultan and
his advisers, who were declared as being
responsible for the financial and diplomatic
instability. After his overthrow, Selim III,

an accomplished poet and a master composer of classical Ottoman music, turned to


his personal interests. There was, however,
one final attempt to restore Selim III to the
throne, led by Alemdar Mustafa Pasha
(17651808), a powerful ayan and future
grand vizier who provided a safe haven for
the surviving advisers of the former sultan.
But with his rescuers at the very gate of the
palace on July 28, 1808, Selim was condemned to death by the order of Mustafa
IV (17791808), who soon afterward was
deposed in his turn by his successor
Mahmoud II (17891839).
Fatih Yesil
See also: Russo-Ottoman War, 18061812;
Serbian War of Independence, 18041817

Further Reading
Cleveland, William. A History of the Modern
Middle East. Boulder, CO: Westview
Press, 2013.
Shaw, Stanford J. Between Old and New: The
Ottoman Empire under Sultan Selim III
17891807. Cambridge, MA: Harvard
University Press, 1971.
Shaw, Stanford J. History of the Ottoman
Empire and Modern Turkey. Vol. 1, The
Empire of the Gazis: The Rise and Decline
of the Ottoman Empire, 12801808. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1976.

Serbia, Invasions of, 1914


The Austro-Hungarians followed their declaration of war upon Serbia on July 28,
1914, with what would be the first of three
attempts in 1914 to overrun the country
they deemed responsible for the Sarajevo
assassination. The initial invasion began on
August 12, 1914.
Austro-Hungarian forces numbering
around 460,000 men were led by General
Oskar Potiorek (18531933), the official

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Serbia, Invasions of, 1915

who had bungled the security arrangements


for Franz Ferdinand (18631914) in Sarajevo. Serbian troops, numbering 400,000,
were battle hardened by their experiences
in the two Balkan Wars and were motived
by defending their homeland. Their
commander was the veteran field marshal
(Vojvoda) Radomir Putnik (18471917),
who had led the Serbs to victory in the
Balkan Wars.
Austro-Hungarian troops crossed the Sava
River at Sabac and Drina River from eastern
Bosnia and advanced toward a ridge north of
the Jadar River called Mount Cer. There on
August 16, the Serbs counterattacked and,
in a four-day battle, drove the AustroHungarians back to their own territories.
They had all left Serbia by August 24. The
Battle of Mt. Cer was the first Entente victory of World War I. Buoyed by their success, the Serbs briefly invaded Bosnia, only
to be forced back by logistical difficulties
and spirited Austro-Hungarian resistance.
Potiorek attempted a second invasion
across the Drina on September 8, 1914.
After fierce fighting and heavy losses on
both sides, the Austro-Hungarians managed
to secure a foothold on Serbian territory.
The campaign then stagnated into trench
warfare. With the Austro-Hungarians taking
huge casualties on the Eastern Front against
the Russians and the Serbs still rebuilding
after the Balkan Wars, neither could gather
the resources to break the stalemate.
Potiorek launched his third invasion
of Serbia on November 5, 1914. AustroHungarian troops thrust across the Drina
toward the town of Valjevo. This forced the
Serbian army to evacuate both Valjevo and
Belgrade. The government had already
left Belgrade and established itself to the
south at Nis at the beginning of the war.
Austro-Hungarian troops entered Valjevo on
November 15 and Belgrade on November 30.

Putnik rallied his forces for a counterattack on


December 3 along the Kolubara River. The
overextended Austro-Hungarians collapsed.
Most of their units retreated north towards
the Sava. The Serbs reentered Belgrade on
December 15 in triumph. By that time, all of
the Austro-Hungarians had returned to their
own territory.
In 1914, the Serbs achieved three great
victories against the Austro-Hungarians.
These came at a heavy cost. The Serbs lost
22,000 dead, 91,000 wounded, and
19,000 missing. The Austro-Hungarian
invaders also paid a heavy price for their
failures. They lost 28,000 dead and 122,000
wounded. Both sides realized at the end of
1914 that the war was far from over.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Austria-Hungary in the Balkans
during World War I; Putnik, Radomir (1847
1917); Serbia, Invasion of, 1915; Serbia in
World War I

Further Reading
Fryer, C. E. J. The Destruction of Serbia in
1915. Boulder, CO: East European Monographs, 1997.
Mitrovic, Andrej. Serbias Great War, 1914
1918. West Lafayette, IN: Purdue University Press, 2007.
Petrovich, Michael Boro. A History of Modern
Serbia, 18041918. Vol. 1. New York:
Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1976.

Serbia, Invasions of, 1915


The fighting between Austria-Hungary and
Serbia in 1914 had left both sides exhausted.
At the beginning of 1915, neither AustriaHungary nor Serbia was capable of further
offensive action. By this time, the AustroHungarians were heavily engaged on the
Eastern Front attempting to contain a

Serbia, Invasions of, 1915

Russian advance. The Serbs, although victorious against the three Austro-Hungarian
invasions of the autumn of 1914, had yet to
recover from the human and material losses
incurred during the Balkan Wars. By the
beginning of 1915, they were experiencing
a logistical crisis. Also, epidemic diseases
like cholera and typhus plagued the entire
country. Even so, they expanded the war
and stretched their limited resources further.
With the collapse of order in Albania after
the withdrawal of William of Wied (1876
1945) from the country in September 1914,
the Serbs increased their presence in the
north of the country.
During the spring and summer of 1915,
other countries became involved in the
Austro-Serb conflict. In order to aid their
Austro-Hungarian ally and to establish a
land connection to their Ottoman ally the
Germans decided to intervene. To do this,
they approached Bulgaria and offered Macedonia, which the Serbs had taken during
the Balkan Wars. On September 6, 1915,
the Bulgarians signed an alliance agreement
that obligated them to participate in an
attack on Serbia, together with AustriaHungary and Germany. On October 6,
1915, one Austro-Hungarian and one
German army crossed the Danube and the
Sava Rivers to invade Serbia. Two Bulgarian
armies seeking revenge for the loss of the
Second Balkan War advanced into Serbia
from the east on October 14.
At the beginning of 1915, the British and
French sought a means to increase logistical
support to the Serbs. While they approached
Bulgaria seeking a conduit to Serbia and an
ally against the Ottoman Empire, they
could not provide sufficient incentive for
Bulgaria to join the Entente. Serbia refused
to part with Bulgarias main objective, Macedonia. The Central Powers, however, could
offer Bulgaria the immediate occupation of

Macedonia. The Entente could not. The


most direct route to the Serbs, however,
went through the Greek port of Salonika
and up the Vardar River valley. On invitation
of the Greek prime minister Eleuthe rios
Venizelos (18641936), British and French
troops began to arrive in Salonika on
October 7, 1915. Meanwhile, the Venizelos
government fell, rendering the Entente
arrival unwelcome.
Nevertheless, British and French units
moved up the Vardar in an attempt to aid
the beleaguered Serbs. The invasions from
the north and east forced the Serbian army
into the southwestern part of the country.
The Bulgarians entered Skopje on October 22. They blocked the Entente forces
and forced them back down the Vardar valley and into Greek territory. With AustroHungarian and German pressure easing
from the north due to logistical difficulties,
the Serbs attempted to make a stand against
the Bulgarians on the historic battlefield of
Kosovo Polje, but were unable to withstand
the Bulgarians. After their defeat at Kosovo
Polje, the remnants of the Serbian army
crossed over the frontier into Albania to
seek help from the Entente in Adriatic ports.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Austria-Hungary in the Balkans
during World War I; Bulgaria in World War I;
Putnik, Radomir (18471917); Serbia, Invasions of, 1914; Serbia in World War I

Further Reading
Fryer, C. E. J. The Destruction of Serbia
in 1915. Boulder, CO: East European
Monographs, 1997.
Mitrovic, Andrej. Serbias Great War, 1914
1918, West Lafayette, IN: Purdue University Press, 2007.
Petrovich, Michael Boro. A History of Modern
Serbia, 18041918. Vol. 1. New York:
Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1976.

273

274

Serbia and the Balkan Wars

Serbia and the Balkan Wars


The origins of Serbian participation in the
Balkan Wars of 19121913 lie in the Berlin
settlement of 1878. In the Berlin settlement,
the Great Powers recognized Serbian
independence from the Ottoman Empire
and granted to Serbia Ottoman territory
around the city of Nis . Nevertheless, for
many nationalist Serbs, the settlement was
a disappointment. The Austro-Hungarian
occupation of Bosnia-Herzegovina and the
sanjak of Novi Pazar blocked Serbian
expectations of expansion to the Adriatic
Sea. The continued Ottoman presence in
Kosovo and Macedonia thwarted Serbian
hopes of obtaining these regions. After
1878, because Ottoman rule was considerably weaker than Austro-Hungarian occupation, Serbian nationalist hopes focused on
Kosovo and Macedonia. Serbias only
nationalist rival for Kosovo was tiny Montenegro. In Macedonia, however, Bulgarian
and Greek national aspirations conflicted
with those of the Serbs. Attempts by the Balkan states to create an alliance directed
against the Ottomans foundered on the problem of Macedonia.
Russian military defeat in the RussoJapanese War in 1905 and diplomatic defeat
in the Bosnian Crisis in 1908 caused the St.
Petersburg government to urge in Belgrade
and Sofia the conclusion of a Balkan Alliance. This coincided with the realization of
governments of the two Balkan states that
they had to cooperate for any chance of success against the Ottomans. Consequently,
Bulgaria and Serbia signed a treaty of alliance on March 13, 1912, in Sofia. According
to a secret part of the treaty, in the event of
any division of Ottoman territory, the Bulgarians were to obtain Thrace, the Serbs
northern Albania. Macedonia was to be

divided into a Bulgarian zone and a contested zone, whose disposition would be
left to the Russian tsar to arbitrate. Further
arrangements between Bulgaria and Serbia
provided for Serbian troops to operate in
Macedonia, Kosovo, and Albania and Bulgarian soldiers to move into Thrace. The
Serbs then signed a treaty of alliance with
Montenegro in Lucerne Switzerland on September 27, 1912. No formal written arrangement existed between Serbia and Greece.
The mobilized strength of the Serbian
army was 230,000 men, organized into 10
infantry divisions and one cavalry division.
In preparation for war, the Serbs divided
their forces into four groups. The Serbian
First Army was concentrated in southern
Serbia. This force and the Serbian Second
Army, located in western Bulgaria, were to
march into Macedonia from the north and
east, respectively. The Serbian Third Army
was poised to march into Kosovo from
western Serbia. Two smaller detachments,
the Ibor Army and the Javor Brigade were
in northwestern Serbia positioned to invade
the sanjak of Novi Pazar. The chief of staff
of the Serbian forces was General Radomir
Putnik (18471917).
The Serbian First Army invaded Ottoman
territory on October 19. On October 23, the
Ottoman Vardar Army attacked the Serbs at
Kumanovo. The resulting battle ended after
two days in a Serbian victory. This was the
largest Serbian battle of the First Balkan
War. Because of this success, General
Putnik received the title Vojvoda (field
marshal). After taking Skoplje without any
opposition, the victorious Serbs pursued the
Ottomans down the Vardar valley. They
smashed the Ottomans again at Prilep and
at Bitola (Monastir). With the fall of Bitola
on November 19, most of Macedonia was
in Serbian hands.

Serbia and the Balkan Wars

Serbian soldiers inspect a row of cannons during the Balkan Wars, October 1912. (HultonDeutsch Collection/Corbis)

Meanwhile at the end of October, the Serbian Second Army, after having advanced
into southeastern Macedonia, prepared to
travel to Thrace to assist the Bulgarian Second Army with the siege of Adrianople.
In the northwest, the detachments waited
until the Belgrade government determined
that the Austro-Hungarians would not
oppose the Serbian occupation of the sanjak
of Novi Pazar. When this became clear, the
Serbian forces seized the sanjak.
The Serbian Third Army invaded Kosovo,
where it met only light resistance mainly
from Albanian irregulars. Having passed
through the site of the historic 1389 battle,
the Serbian Third Army proceeded on into
northern Albania. Advance units of the Third
Army reached the Adriatic at Lexhe (Lesh)
(Alessio) on November 17 and Durre s
(Durazzo) on November 28. They linked up
with Montenegrin forces besieging Scutari

(Shkoder). As the Serbs advanced, an


Albanian council in Vlore (Valona) proclaimed Albanian independence on November 28. The Serbian presence in Albania
provoked immediate Austro-Hungarian and
Italian opposition. Both powers saw it as a
challenge to their control of the Adriatic and
the new state of Albania.
By the time of the signing of the armistice
on December 3, the Serbs gained all their initial objectives. They also had rendered aid to
their Bulgarian and Montenegrin allies.
Austro-Hungarian opposition to the Serbian
presence in Albania made it problematic and
increased Serbian determination to retain its
conquests in Macedonia. On January 13,
1913, the Belgrade government formally
requested in Sofia revision of the March 1912
treaty. The Bulgarians ignored this request.
After the renewal of the war on January 30, 1913, Serbian forces were in action

275

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Serbia and the Balkan Wars

around Adrianople and Scutari. The Serbian


Second Army participated in the final
assault on the Ottoman fortress on
March 26. At Scutari, the Serbs responded
to a Montenegrin request for additional
troops by sending around 30,000 additional
soldiers. The Ottoman defenders continued
to thwart all Montenegrin and Serbian
attacks. Because of Great Power pressure,
the Serbs withdrew their troops from Scutari
on April 10. Some Serbian forces remained
in northern Albania, however.
By this time, the dispute with Bulgaria
was becoming serious. The Serbian confluence of interest with Greece was increasingly obvious. The Bulgarians and Greeks
had not concluded any formal agreement
over the division of Ottoman territory,
mainly because the Bulgarians expected
that their army would take all the territory
they wanted without any need to make concessions to their ally. On May 5, 1913, the
Greeks and Serbs concluded an alliance
directed against Bulgaria. In this arrangement, they divided Macedonia between
them. In a subsequent agreement later that
month, they also divided Albania into
zones of influence.
On May 26, 1913, the Serbs again
requested a revision of the March 1912
treaty. Again, the Bulgarians refused. They
relied upon Russian support. When the
Treaty of London ending the Balkan War
was signed on May 30, both sides were preparing for renewed conflict. The Russians
vacillated on the issue of arbitration. Before
the Russian czar could exercise his arbitration powers, Bulgarian troops attacked
Greek and Serbian positions in Macedonia
on the night of June 2930, sparking the
Second Balkan War.
The Serbs responded immediately
with vigorous counterattacks against their
erstwhile allies. They fielded around

300,000 soldiers under the command of Vojvoda Putnik. The Serbs lined up along the
Bulgarian frontier, with the First and Third
Armies in Macedonia. A Montenegrin division joined the Serbs. Almost 50,000
Serbian troops remained in and around Albania. The Serbs achieved success at the battle
of Bregalnitsa in southeastern Macedonia.
They forced the Bulgarians to retreat toward
their old frontiers. By mid-July, Serbian pressure had forced the Bulgarians back to the old
frontiers all along the line. On July 18, however, Serbian attacks failed against the Bulgarian defenders at Kalimantsi. This had
little effect on the outcome of the war. When
the Ottomans and Romanians intervened in
the war against Bulgaria, the Bulgarians had
to request an armistice. Initial talks began at
Nis on July 20 and soon moved to Bucharest.
The Treaty of Bucharest, signed on
August 10, confirmed the Serbian success in
the Balkan Wars. Serbia obtained Kosovo
and both zones of Macedonia as delineated
in the March 1912 treaty. They also divided
the sanjak of Novi Pazar with Montenegro.
Their defeat of Bulgaria gave the Serbs a
strong position in southeastern Europe.
It also established Serbia as the dominant Serb state in its rivalry with Montenegro,
which became a Serbian satellite. It bestowed
tremendous prestige for Serbia among the
South Slavic peoples of the Habsburg Empire.
Finally this victory left Serbia as Russias
only viable ally in the Balkans.
The Serbian victory, however, came at a
heavy cost. Serbian casualties for the Balkan
Wars were at least 36,550 dead and 55,000,
although they may have been somewhat
higher. The intense fighting against the
Bulgarians in the Second Balkan War probably accounted for heavier losses than the
fighting against the Ottomans in the First
Balkan War. Also, Serbian troops returning
from Balkan battlefields brought home with

Serbia in World War I

them epidemic diseases such as cholera,


which would spread among the civilian
population.
The Treaty of Bucharest did not end the
fighting in southeastern Europe for the Serbs.
Serbian troops continued to be active in
northern Albania. This aggrieved the AustroHungarians, who presented an ultimatum in
Belgrade on October 18, 1913, demanding
that the Serbs evacuate northern Albania.
The Serbian government agreed to comply
with this demand. Nevertheless, Serbian
troops lingered in northeastern Albania.
Friction between Belgrade and Vienna
increased. The political and territorial gains
incurred in these wars increased the appetites
of Serb nationalists for further expansion at
the expense of the Habsburg Empire and
increased Austro-Hungarian suspicions of
their Balkan neighbor.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Balkan League, 1912; Balkan War,
First, 19121913; Balkan War, Second, 1913;
Balkan Wars, 19121913, Causes; Balkan
Wars, 19121913, Consequences; Kalimantsi,
Battle of, 1913; Kumanovo, Battle of, 1912

Further Reading
Hall, Richard C. Bulgarias Road to the First
World War. Boulder, CO: East European
Monographs, 1996.
Helmreich, E. C. The Diplomacy of the Balkan
Wars, 19121913. Cambridge, MA:
Harvard University Press, 1938.
Jowett, Philip S. Armies of the Balkan Wars,
19121913. Oxford: Osprey, 2011.
Petrovich, Michael Boro. A History of Modern
Serbia, 18041914. Vol. 2. New York:
Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1976.

Serbia in World War I


On July 28, 1914, Austria-Hungary declared
war on Serbia, beginning what some have

called the Third Balkan War and leading


directly into World War I. Austro-Hungarian
antagonism toward Serbia had been building
since 1903 when a disgruntled group of
Serbian army officers and political figures
assassinated King Alexander I Obrenovic
(18761903) and replaced him with Peter I
(18441921) of the rival Karageorgevic family. Alexander had pursued policies of friendship toward Austria; Peter, and especially his
powerful prime minister, Nicola Pasic
(18451926), did not.
In 1908, this dislike grew into hostility
when Austria-Hungary annexed the province of Bosnia-Herzegovina, which the
Austrians had occupied since 1878. BosniaHerzegovina had a large Serbian population,
and many Serbs regarded it as belonging to
a greater Serbian polity. The Serbian
government and people reacted strongly
against the annexation, and protests continued for some time. The annexation grew
into a diplomatic crisis, resolved only when
the Serb ally, Russiafaced with threats
from Germanyadvised the Serbs to temper their protests.
Following this disappointment, Serbia
focused its attention southeastward.
In 1912, a coalition of Serbian, Montenegrin, Greek, and Bulgarian forces attacked
the Ottoman Empire and defeated its forces
in the First Balkan War. In a dispute over
the spoils, Bulgaria attacked Serbia in 1913
and suffered defeat in the Second Balkan
War. Both wars brought considerable
gains for Serbia, increasing its land area by
79 percent and its population by 55 percent.
However, they also resulted in 30,000 soldiers
killed and 45,000 wounded and absorbed considerable quantities of supplies and ammunition that the Serbs needed in 1914. Perhaps
most important, while the two Balkan wars
gave the Serbian government and people considerable confidence and pride, they also

277

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Serbia in World War I

increased Austrian suspicion and resentment


toward Serbia, with one Austrian officer terming the Serbian capital a nest of vipers.
When Archduke Franz Ferdinand (1863
1914) fell victim to assassination in Sarajevo, the Austrian government assumed that
the Serbian government was behind it. This
assumption led to the July Crisis of 1914,
the ultimatum of July 23, and the Austrian
declaration of war on Serbia on July 28.
The debate about the role of the Serbian
government in the assassination is ongoing,
but the evidence indicates that whereas the
young conspirators gained weapons and
training from Serbian official sources, the
government itself played no role in instigating the murder and had even warned the
Austrian government that an attempt might
be made on the archdukes life.
In fall 1914, the Serbs and Austrians
fought several battles along their common

border. Although the Austro-Hungarian


army as a whole was substantially larger,
the outbreak of war with Russia compelled
the Dual Monarchy to send most of its forces
against that country, and this meant that the
two armies on the Balkan Front were closely
matched. Austro-Hungarian forces briefly
occupied Belgrade. On August 2526, the
Serbian army, led by the indomitable Vojvoda (General) Radomir Putnik (1847
1917) defeated the invaders at the battle of
Cer Mountain. The Austro-Hungarians had
to return across their borders. They invaded
two more times that year and even briefly
occupied Belgrade, but the Serbian army
forced them to evacuate the Serbian capital;
by the end of December, the lines largely
followed the original borders.
Between the end of the fighting in 1914
and the German-Austrian-Bulgarian invasion of October 1915, Serbia suffered a

Serbia in World War I

dreadful contagion of typhus, which killed


an estimated 150,000 people during the first
six months of 1915, weakened many more,
and brought on other diseases that persisted
throughout the war. Only with the occupation of western Serbia by Austro-Hungarian
forces later that year was the typhus
epidemic brought under control.
The Central Powers offensive against
Serbia in October 1915 demonstrated the
effectiveness of combined forces under a
unified command. Led by German field
marshal August von Mackensen (1849
1945), an Austro-German army crossed the
Sava and Danube on October 6, drawing
the Serbian forces northward. When these
forces had committed themselves, the
Bulgarians, seeking redress for the Second
Balkan War, struck from the east and south,
intending to close a huge trap around the
Serbs. A number of Serbs were able to
escape, withdrawing to their legendary
ground of Kosovo Pole, the site of the great
apotheosis of the Serbian people in 1389.
There the military and civilian leaders
decided not to surrender to the Central
Powers, but to escape to the Allied base
established at Salonika in Greece. When
the Bulgarians severed that avenue of retreat, the Serbs turned westward into Albania, where they hoped to reach the Adriatic
coast and be rescued by Allied ships.
The retreat to the coast was one of the
great tales of suffering in the war. Accompanied by large numbers of civilians and animals, possessing little food, suffering from
cold and exposure, and harassed by vengeful
Albanians who resented Serbian treatment
of their fellows in Kosovo in 19121913,
the retreating Serbs finally reached the Albanian port at Durres (Durazzo). From there,
French ships transported them to the island
of Corfu and to Tunisia. Of the 300,000 soldiers who withstood the initial attack by the

forces of the Central Powers, about 120,000


were rescued. Of this number, 11,000 on
Corfu died of disease, malnutrition, or exposure sustained on the retreat.
Serbia was divided into two zones of occupation, one under Austrian and the other
under Bulgarian administration. In neither
zone did the occupiers treat the Serbs gently,
but the Austrians were at least eager to restore
the agricultural productivity of Serbia in order
to feed their own armies and populations.
Austrian officials brought the epidemics
under control and introduced agricultural
improvements so that by 1917, agricultural
production had reached prewar levels. Still,
ever higher requisitions, inflation, shortages,
and forced labor in 1918 made survival
difficult for the Serbian people. In 1917, Bulgarian troops brutally suppressed an uprising
around the town of Toplica.
Together with their troops, Serbian political leaders had escaped to Corfu and continued to function as a government. Serbian
war aims called for the creation of a Greater
Serbia by joining together Serbia proper,
Bosnia-Herzegovina, and Montenegro.
However, in 1917, Serbias great patron,
Russia, collapsed in revolution, so the Serbian leaders, particularly Pasic, decided to
approach the Yugoslav Committee, a group
of South Slavic political activists from the
Habsburg monarchy favored by the British
and French governments, to discuss the
future of the Balkans. The result was the
Pact of Corfu (July 1917), a vaguely worded
declaration calling for the political unity of
the Croats, Slovenes, and Serbs under the
Karageorgevic dynasty. That would be the
founding document of the future Yugoslavia, although it left out many details that
would generate rancor and ill will for years
to come.
In 1918, the Serbs had their opportunity
for revenge against their conquerors. After

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Serbian Retreat, 1915

refitting, retraining, and resupplying on Corfu


and in Tunisia, the Serbian army was transferred to Salonika, in 1916, where it joined a
multinational Allied force. On September 15,
1918, this force together with French troops,
numbering 29 divisions, launched a crushing
offensive against the Bulgarians. The next
day, they broke through the Bulgarian lines
at Dobro Pole. Bulgaria, which had lost its
German advisers and effective German divisions to the Western Front, sued for an armistice, which was concluded on September 30.
This opened a clear road for the Serbian forces
not only to return to their homeland, but to
establish the power on the ground that would
lead to the creation of the new Yugoslavia,
proclaimed by Prince Regent Alexander on
December 1, 1918.
Karl Roider
See also: Alexander I, King of Yugoslavia
(18881934); Cer Mountain, Battle of, 1914;
Dobro Pole, Battle of, 1918; Macedonian
Front, 19161918; Putnik, Radomir (1847
1917); Serbia, Invasions of, 1914; Serbia,
Invasions of, 1915

Further Reading
Banac, Ivo. The National Question in Yugoslavia: Origins, History, Politics. Ithaca,
NY: Cornell University Press, 1984;
reprinted, 1989.
Fryer, C. E. J. The Destruction of Serbia in
1915. Boulder, CO: East European Monographs, 1997.
Judah, Tim. The Serbs. New Haven, CT: Yale
University Press, 1997.
Mitrovic, Andrej. Serbias Great War, 1914
1918. West Lafayette, IN: Purdue University Press, 2007.

Serbian Retreat, 1915


The invasion of Serbia in October 1915 by
Austro-Hungarian, Bulgarian, and German

forces rapidly overwhelmed the exhausted


and undermanned Serbian army. After the
Serbs failed to stop the Bulgarians at the historic Kosovo Polje battlefield, they retreated
into Albania. At the end of November, in
wintery conditions, the remnants of the Serbian army, accompanied by civilians and
even some Austro-Hungarian prisoners of
war, departed from Serbian territory and
began its trek across the northern Albanian
Alps toward the Adriatic Sea. The Serbs set
out from Pec and Prizren in three columns.
This was a real anabasis.
The northern column, acting as a rear
guard, delayed its departure from Pec until
December 7. It contained the largest contingent of Serbian troops. It had the responsibility to act as a rear guard against an
attack by the Austro-Hungarians, Bulgarians, and Germans. The northern column
retreated through Montenegrin territory.
The aged King Peter (18441921) and the
ailing Field Marshall (Vojvoda) Radomir
Putnik (18471917) had to be carried during
the retreat. The northern column began to
reach Scutari on December 15. The survivors of this arduous trek continued to trickle
in for four days.
The central and southern columns both
left Prizren. The central column headed
straight across northern Albania. It had the
shortest route to the sea, but encountered
some resistance from hostile Albanians.
The central column reached Scutari. The
southern column was the first to depart
and the last to arrive at the coast. It left
on November 25 and moved south all the
way to Elbasan. Along the way it had to
contend with Albanian resistance and a
Bulgarian attack near Debar. The southern
column then turned northwesterly and
passing through Tirana, reached the sea at
Durre s (Durazzo) and Vlore (Valona) on
December 21.

Serbian War of Independence, 18041817

For those who survived to reach the sea,


the ordeal was not over. As many as 70,000
Serbian soldiers died in passage, but the
total number of Serbian dead is unknown.
The Italians had little interest in aiding the
Serbs, whom they regarded as potential
rivals for Adriatic domination. Finally, the
British and French assisted their Italian
allies in evacuating the surviving Serbs
from the northern and central columns from
She ngjin (San Giovanni di Medua) and
those from the southern column from Durres
and Vlore. The evacuations took place under
threat of Austro-Hungarian naval action.
They began in January and continued until
April. Most of the Serbs initially went to
the Greek island of Corfu, where they
could recover from their ordeal. From
Corfu most went on to Tunisia and other
locations in French North Africa. From
there, many of the Serbian troops after
rest and recover were sent to Salonika,
where they formed a contingent of around
150,000 troops that would participate in the
decisive battle of Dobro Pole in September 1918. This break through the Bulgarian
lines enabled the Serbs finally to return to
their homeland three years after their retreat.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Austria-Hungary in the Balkans
during World War I; Bulgaria in World War I;
Dobro Pole, Battle of, 1918; Putnik, Radomir
(18471917); Serbia, Invasion of 1915; Serbia
in World War I

Further Reading
Adams, John C. Flight in Winter. Princeton,
NJ: Princeton University Press, 1942.
Fryer, C. E. J. The Destruction of Serbia in
1915. Boulder, CO: East European Monographs, 1997.
Mitrovic, Andrej. Serbias Great War, 1914
1918. West Lafayette, IN: Purdue University Press, 2007.

Petrovich, Michael Boro. A History of Modern


Serbia, 18041918. Vol. 1. New York:
Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1976.

Serbian War of Independence,


18041817
The Serbian War of Independence was a
two-phase conflict with two different leaders
directed against the Ottoman Empire. The
first phase of the Serbian revolt had its origins in Serbian loyalty to the Ottoman governor (Pasha) of Belgrade, Hadji Mustapha
Sinik-oglu (17331801). Hadji Mustapha
maintained a benevolent attitude toward the
Serbs, allowing them to collect their own
taxes and to form a militia under the leadership of their knezes. The knez was the chief
or patriarch of an extended family or clan.
Hadji Mustaphas support of the Orthodox
Serbs gained him the somewhat awkward
title Mother of the Serbs. His mild rule and
friendliness toward the Serbs antagonized
many Muslims, who perceived that their privileges were being undermined. The conservative Janissaries of the region particularly
resented his polices. By the eighteenth century, the Janissaries, once among the elite of
the Ottoman army, had evolved into a
privileged semi-military caste determined to
maintain their special privileges and statue.
In 1801, the Janissaries assassinated Hadji
Mustapha and attempted to disarm the Serbs.
In February 1804, the Janissaries, fearing a
Serbian uprising, executed a number of
Serbian leaders.
In response, the surviving Serbs organized resistance. Fighting erupted in February 1804 between armed Serbian bands and
Ottoman soldiers. The Serbian revolt originated not as a gesture of nationalism aimed
at the sultan in Constantinople, but as a
peasant revolt directed against the misrule

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Serbian War of Independence, 18041817

of the Janissaries in Belgrade. At the beginning of 1804, the Janissaries and other Muslim authorities in the Pashalik of Belgrade
attempted to quash the discontent by murdering the leading knezes. This sparked the
Serbian revolt.
One knez who escaped the massacre,
George Petrovic (17681817), known as
Karageorge (Black George) because of his
swarthy appearance, emerged as the leader
of the revolt. Karageorge was a swine merchant from Topola. Karageorge obtained
external support especially from Serbs living
in neighboring Austria. Many Serbian veterans of the Austrian army joined his forces.
The Austrian government, however, preoccupied with Napoleon, remained aloof. After
negotiations with representatives of the sultan
failed, Karageorge turned to Russia for assistance. Initially, they also preferred to remain
apart. Fighting erupted in February 1804
between armed Serbian bands and Ottoman
soldiers. Karageorge and his subordinates
defeated at least four Ottoman armies sent to
dispose of him. In December 1806, he captured Belgrade.
After his success in overrunning the Pashlik of Belgrade, he assumed the position of
hereditary knez in 1808. His position was
never secure. Many other knezes resented
his attempt to establish a superior position.
Loyalties in liberated Serbia remained clannish and local. On Russian advice some
Serbian leaders organized a Governing
Council, but Karageorge felt no inclination
to accept any limitation on his authority.
Karageorge continued to contact the
Austrians and French to secure aid. The
Napoleonic Wars, however, commanded
the full attention of the western Europeans.
After the outbreak of the Russo-Ottoman
War of 18061812, Czar Alexander of Russia (17771825) offered some support men
and material to the Serbs. Some negotiations

with the Austrians also took place. In 1807,


the Russians concluded a formal alliance
with the Serbs. In 1810, a Russian force
briefly entered Serbia to help the Serbs.
Even before Napoleon led his Grande
Armee to Moscow in 1812, however, Russia
attention to the Balkans faltered. The conclusion of peace between the Ottomans and
Russians with the Treaty of Bucharest of
May 1812 ended Russian intervention on
behalf of the Serbs. By 1813, the Serbs
were exhausted and bereft of outside help.
The revolt fizzled and Karageorge fled to
Austria. Ottoman troops reoccupied Serbia
including Belgrade that same year.
Serbia did not remain quiet for long. The
second phase of the war of independence
began in early 1815. Initially a knez who was
a rival of Karageorge, Milos Obrenovic
(17801860) collaborated with the restored
Ottoman regime. Having gained a political
profile, he successfully maneuvered between
the Ottoman authorities and the dissident
Serbs. He maintained credibility with the
other knezes by defeating an Ottoman force
at Dublje in northwestern Serbia, and he
maintained his channels with the Ottomans
by treating his captives well. By an Ottoman
edict of December 1815, he achieved recognition as the chief knez of the pashalik of
Belgrade. Under his regime, Serbs were permitted to retain their arms and to have their
own assembly (skupstina).
The somewhat murky murder of the
recently returned Karageorge in 1817 confirmed Obrenovic more or less domestically
as the Serbian leader. Under him, the Serbs
gradually obtained increased privileges. In
1830, the Ottomans recognized Obrenovic
as hereditary prince of autonomous Serbia.
By 1833, he had established fixed borders
for his state. Serbia was well on its way to
formal independence.
Richard C. Hall

Serbo-Ottoman War, 1876


See also: Karageorge (George Petrovic; 1762
1818), Obrenovic, Milos (17801860); RussoOttoman War, 18061812

Further Reading
Judah, Tim. The Serbs: History, Myth and the
Destruction of Yugoslavia. New Haven,
CT: Yale University Press, 1997.
Petrovich, Michael Boro. A History of Modern
Serbia, 18041918. Vol. 1. New York:
Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1976.
Stavrianos, L. S. The Balkans since 1453. New
York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1958.

Serbo-Ottoman War, 1876


Serbia and Montenegro had irredentist claims
on various parts of Ottoman Balkan provinces
and played instrumental roles in rebellions
and public disorders of Serbs and Christian
Albanians against Ottoman local authorities.
Therefore, when the wide-scale rebellions
were started in Bosnia-Herzegovina and Bulgaria in 1875, the Serbian and Montenegrin
leadership saw the time ripe for gaining
more territory from the Ottoman Empire.
They gave an ultimatum to the Ottoman
Empire for some concessions and, upon its
rejection, declared war on July 12, 1876.
The ensuing wars and rebellions that erupted
one after another, including the RussoOttoman War, continued up until 1878.
One of the first academically trained officers, Abdulkerim Nadir Pasha (18071883;
also known as Abdi) was appointed as the
overall commander of the Ottoman forces
that were mobilized and concentrated near
Vidin, Nis, Novi Pazar, Scutari, and Herzegovina. Smaller Ottoman forces fought
against Montenegrins from Albania against
both Serbs and Montenegrins from Herzegovina. In comparison, the Serbian forces were
divided into two groups: the northern one

under the command of Prince Milan (1854


1901) consisted of Novibazar, Ibar, and
Timok divisions; and the southern army
under the Russian general Mikhail Grigorievich Chernyayevs (18281898) command.
Due to mountains, broken terrain, and general lack of transportation, Montenegrin
forces were not able to concentrate and
instead fought unconventional mountain
warfare throughout the war.
On both sides there were regular as well
irregular and volunteer units. Most noticeably, the Serbs lacked cavalry and the Montenegrins professional officers. Within the
Ottoman officer corps, there was bitter
infighting between military academy graduates (Mektepli) and those who had risen
from the ranks (Alayl). Similarly, diversity
of weapons and problematic logistical support plagued both sides.
Skirmishes and small battles on the
Montenegro front did not result in a clear
winner. Additionally, Montenegrin and
Ottoman local commanders suffered difficulty to control tribal warriors who paid
more attention to their tribal grievances and
looting than the political cause and overall
military campaign plans.
General Chernyayev, who achieved his
fame fighting colonial wars, had little understanding of the rules and dynamics of conventional warfare and clearly underestimated
opposing Ottoman forces. He mounted
attacks in three-pronged targeting Ottoman
concentrations in Vidin, Nish, and Novi
Pazar. He was defeated in detail, and Ottoman
forces pursued retreating Serbian troops into
the Principality of Serbia. After the battle of
Zajecar (July 23, 1876), the road to Belgrade
was opened to Ottomans. With the timely
intervention of the Great Powers, the Ottoman
invasion stopped short of its final target. The
cease-fire allowed the Serbs to replenish
their deficits in arms, munitions, officers

283

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Se`vres, Treaty of, 1920

(with the induction of Russian volunteers),


and fortifications.
Chernyayev relaunched an attack on September 25, 1876. Abdulkerim Pasha defeated
Serbian attack columns and immediately
attacked Chernyayevs headquarters at
Cunis. This caused panic throughout the Serbian forces, and the Serbs called out to Russia
for help. In response, Russia gave an ultimatum, which forced the Ottoman Empire to an
armistice with Serbia and Montenegro on
October 31, 1876. The tumultuous situation
in the Balkans, however, would continue.
The Balkans would become the main theater
of the Russo-Ottoman War that erupted in
1877.
zcan
Ahmet O
See also: Bosnian Revolt, 1876; Bulgarian
Horrors, 1876; Russo-Ottoman War, 1877
1878.

Further Reading
MacKenzie, David. The Lion of Tashkent: The
Career of General M. G. Cherniaev.
Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1974.
MacKenzie, David. The Serbs and Russian
Pan-Slavism, 18751878. Ithaca, NY:
Cornell University Press, 1976.
Petrovich, Michael Boro. A History of Modern
Serbia, 18041918. 2 vols. New York:
Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1976.

Se`vres, Treaty of, 1920


The Treaty of Se`vres among 13 Allied
powers (most notably France, Great Britain,
and Italy) and Turkey was signed in
August 1920. Although the Armistice of
Mudros ended World War I hostilities with
the Ottoman Empire in October 1918, the
Treaty of Se`vres took another 20 months to
conclude. As with many other treaties that
ended the war, its terms were presented by

the winners to the losers without negotiation. Unlike many other treaties, few of its
terms were ever implemented. In 1923, the
Treaty of Lausanne superseded most of the
terms of the Treaty of Se`vres, and it was
thus the shortest-lived of the treaties ending
the war.
Although the Allies (specifically France
and Great Britain) did not envision the
destruction of the Ottoman Empire in 1914,
the Treaty of Se`vres confirmed what had
become an established fact. The Ottoman
Empire was officially dissolved, and the
new state of Turkey appeared in its place.
The sultan remained in power, but the provisions of the treaty made him a virtual prisoner to the interests of the victorious
nations. Consistent with realities on the
ground, Se`vres removed all predominantly
Arabic-speaking regions from Turkish control. The region of the Hejaz (in what is
now Saudi Arabia) was made an independent kingdom and named a signatory to the
treaty.
The creation of an Arabian state notwithstanding, the treaty denied independence to
much of the Middle East, which passed
under French and British control as mandates. While nominally free of foreign
rule, Arabia was in reality under British
suzerainty. Palestine and Mesopotamia
became British mandates, while Syria and
Lebanon became French mandates. The
mandates were supposed to lead to eventual
independence under the supervision of the
League of Nations. The United States, displeased at what it saw as the furtherance of
European imperialism in the region, and
never itself at war with the Ottoman Empire,
declined to participate in the treaty negotiations. Nevertheless, U.S. president Woodrow Wilson (18561924) secured the right
to determine the borders of the new state of
Armenia.

Se`vres, Treaty of, 1920

The treaty was an immediate disappointment to Arab leaders. The British had made
grandiose promises of independence during
the war to Arab leaders such as Sharif
Husayn. In return for staging rebellions in
the Arab parts of the Ottoman Empire, the
British had promised Husayn and other
Arab leaders that they would support the
creation of independent Arab states. The
Treaty of Se`vres fell far short of those guarantees. Instead, it upheld the secret SykesPicot Agreement of 1916 wherein Britain
and France agreed to divide former Ottoman
territories among themselves, though the
treaty added the cloak of the mandate system. The treaty also reaffirmed the Balfour
Declaration of 1917 in which Great Britain
stated that it viewed with favor the creation
of a Jewish homeland in Palestine. Nevertheless, the Great Powers took no definitive
steps in that direction.
The treaty did not deal with the humiliations of the Capitulations, which had been
solidified between the states of western
Europe and the Ottoman Empire since the
sixteenth century. These involved unequal
trade terms between the Great Powers and
the Ottoman Empire and granted the right
of extraterritoriality to foreign nationals.
Under the terms of the Treaty of Se`vres, the
Capitulations were effectively continued in
relation to the new state of Turkey.
In addition, the treaty made the Bosporus
and the Dardanelles an international waterway. This provision existed mostly to prevent the Russian Bolshevik regime from
claiming ownership of the straits. Armenia,
the scene of a genocide during the war, was
made independent, and Kurdistan received
significant autonomy within the new Turkish
state. Great Britain landed a force under
General George Milne to guarantee the neutrality of the straits and ensure control of
Constantinople.

The real humiliation for Turkey lay in the


settlement of its European and Anatolian
boundaries. Greece acquired all of European
Turkey except the immediate area around
Constantinople, which came under international control. The Greeks were also
awarded the city of Smyrna, several Aegean
islands, and large parts of western Anatolia.
These areas were to remain under Greek
control for five years, after which the Greeks
were to conduct a plebiscite. Britain and
France presumed that this vote would result
in the annexation of these areas to the Kingdom of Greece. Finally, Ottoman finances
were placed not in Turkish hands but under
the supervision of British, French, and
Italian financiers.
The principal architect of the treaty,
British prime minister David Lloyd George
(18631945), regarded it as the triumph of
Romantic Hellenism and Christendom.
He seems to have immediately recognized,
however, that Great Britain could not
enforce these terms. The Greeks were
already showing an appetite for more of
Anatolia than the treaty permitted, and
Britain was facing intense domestic pressures to demobilize.
Most importantly, Turkish nationalists
were showing determination to resist many
of the terms laid out in the treaty. Brilliantly
led by Mustafa Kemal (18811938), the
hero of Gallipoli, the nationalists planned
to overturn Se`vres. Most nationalists understood that reviving the Ottoman Empire and
recapturing the lost Arab lands could not,
and should not, be accomplished. They bristled, however, at any ethnically Turkish
lands falling under foreign control. Thus,
Kemal set out to regain all Anatolian and
Armenian lands for Turkey.
Only Greece decided to meet Kemal with
military force. The Greeks had 150,000
troops in Turkey, and Greek premier

285

286

Shipka Pass, Battles of, 18771878

Eleuthe rios Venize los (18641936) was


determined to use them to crush Kemals
nationalists. Kemal, however, carried out a
brilliant military campaign in the GrecoTurkish War of 19191922. He recaptured
Smyrna and its hinterland, and then turned
north to move on Constantinople. The Italians, who had come to view Greece as a
more immediate rival than Turkey, agreed
to withdraw their occupation troops after a
defeat at Kemals hands in Central Anatolia.
The Italian decision led the British and
French also to quit Turkey. Within only two
years, the Treaty of Se`vres had been superseded by the Treaty of Lausanne, signed on
July 24. 1923.
Michael S. Neiberg
See also: Greco-Turkish War, 19191922;
Kemal, Mustafa (18811938); Lausanne,
Treaty of, 1923

Further Reading
Fromkin, David. A Peace to End All Peace:
The Fall of the Ottoman Empire and the
Creation of the Modern Middle East. New
York: Holt, 1989.
Helmreich, Paul. From Paris to Se`vres: The
Partition of the Ottoman Empire at the
Peace Conference of 19191920. Columbus: Ohio State University Press, 1974.
Macfie, A. L. The End of the Ottoman Empire,
19181923. London: Longman, 1998.
MacMillan, Margaret. Paris, 1919: Six Months
That Changed the World. New York:
Random House, 2002.

Shipka Pass, Battles of,


18771878
After an easy advance, light casualties,
receiving enthusiastic support from the
Bulgarians and the apparent passivity of the
Ottoman main forces in Sumnu (Shumen)
and Vidin, the Russian command decided

to change its original plan. According


to this change, the Southern Group was
ordered to reach the Balkan passes as soon
as possible. The speed of the Russian
advance caught the Balkan Corps off guard.
Its units, which were supposed to be guarding the Balkan passes, were not yet in their
assigned positions, leaving only weak forward elements in place. So, while the high
command in Constantinople and commander in chief Abdulkerim Nadir Pasha
(1807/91883) were trying to formulate a
workable solution to stop the Russian
advance, the Russian Southern Group,
under the able command of General Iosif
Gurko (18281901), easily captured the
weakly defended and seemingly unimportant Hainbog az defile on July 14, 1877.
This allowed the group to advance immediately through the mountains toward
the main pass at Shipka (S pka). As he
advanced, Gurko repulsed two uncoordinated and timid Ottoman counter-attacks.
The Shipka Pass defensive system was built
against a northern assault not against an
assault coming from its rear. Thereupon a
hopeless defense was crushed in a single
day and Shipka Pass fell on July 19, opening
the door to the straits.
Ongoing combat operations against
Montenegro were suspended and two divisions, under the command of Su leyman
Husnu Pasha (18381892), were ordered to
redeploy in order to fill the gaps in the Balkan passes. Su leyman Pasha reached the
region on July 23 after a 20-day journey
caused mainly by a shortage of coal. He prepared slowly and leisurely for the main
assault, giving Russian defenders ample
time to consolidate their gains and dig into
a defense but also to predict his avenues of
approach and objective, which was none
other than via Shipka Pass. The main assault
was launched on August 21. The Ottoman

Skanderbeg SS Division

troops launched repeated attacks against


Russian positions. Rough terrain, intense
Russian artillery and small-arms fire, poor
coordination at the brigade level, and lack
of effective fire support were instrumental
in the waste of tactical opportunities. Suleyman Pasha, who was dangerously overconfident about the superiority of his own tactical
views, ignored the realities on the ground
and continued on operations against Shipka,
albeit on a smaller scale. The Balkan Corps
remained stuck in front of Shipka until the
assignment of Suleyman Pasha as the new
commander in chief of the Balkan front on
September 26.
Mesut Uyar
See also: Bulgarian Horrors, 1876; RussoOttoman War, 18771878; San Stefano,
Treaty of, 1878; Su leyman Hu snu Pasha
(18381892)

Further Reading
Kececizade Izzet Fuad. Kacrlan Frsatlar:
1877 Osmanl-Rus Savas Hakknda
Elestiriler ve Askeri Dusunceler. Ankara:
Genelkurmay Basmevi, 1997.
Schem, A. J. An Illustrated History of the Conflict between Russia and Turkey with a
Review of the Eastern Question. New
York: H. S. Goodspeed & Co., 1878.
Shaw, Stanford J., and Ezel Kural Shaw. History of the Ottoman Empire and Modern
Turkey. Vol. 2, Reform Revolution and
Republic: The Rise of Modern Turkey
18081975. Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 1976.

Skanderbeg SS Division
The Skanderbeg SS Division was a light
infantry (Mountain) unit of the Waffen SS,
established in March 1944 and consisting
of mainly ethnic Albanians from Nazioccupied Albania. Officially known as the

21. Waffen Gebirgs-Division der SS Skanderbeg (albanische Nr. 1), it was named
after George Kastrioti Skanderbeg (1405
1468), the national hero of Albania, who
resisted the Ottomans from 1443 until his
death in 1468.
In April 1939, Italy occupied Albania,
and, almost exactly two years later, the
Germans occupied Yugoslavia. During
1942 and 1943, both the Wehrmacht and
Waffen SS wanted to use local manpower
to maintain order and fight Yugoslav Partisan and Communist Albanian resistance in
the region. At the same time, the pro-Nazi
government of Albania wanted to form its
own army that would help establish a
greater Albania, consisting of prewar
Albania, Kosovo, and Western Macedonia.
In September 1943, the Germans occupied
Albania after Italy surrendered.
In 1943, many Albanians from Kosovo
and the Sanjak region joined the 13th
Waffen SS Mountain Division (the Handschar [Croatian] division) as Battalion I/2
(later I/28). They received their initial training in southern France and Neuhammer,
Germany. Given the relative success of the
SS Handschar Division, SS Reischfu hrer
Heinrich Himmler (19001945) in February 1944 authorized the formation of a parallel unit of suitable Albanians. Xhafer
Deva (19041978), an Albanian official in
the pro-Nazi Albanian government, helped
recruit 11,400 Albanians from whom about
6,000 were actually inducted into the Waffen SS. In mid-April 1944, Battalion I/2 of
the Handschar SS Division transferred from
Bosnia to Kosovo to become a part of the
newly created SS Skandeberg Division.
The Skanderbeg Division, numbering
about 6,0006,500 men instead of a normal
division strength (10,00020,000) and commanded by SS-Standartenfu hrer August
Schmidthuber (19011947), was operational

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288

Slivnitsa, Battle of, 1885

from February to November 1944. The division arm patch consisted of a black doubleheaded eagle on a red background. The
recruits wore the white traditional Albanian
highlander cap (qeleshe), and later the SS
issued gray headgear in the same style,
with the Totenkopf sewn on the front and a
collar tab with the Skanderbeg helmet.
The division fought Communist partisans,
led by Enver Hoxha, in Albania and Yugoslavia toward the end of the war. Members
of the division, attached to a regular Wehrmacht unit, conducted anti-Partisan operations or terrorized the local non-Albanian
population in the areas of Greater Albania
not part of pre-1939 Albania. In May 1944,
a portion of the division helped guard
mines in western Kosovo and helped the
Germans round up 281 Jews for deportation.
The division participated in the battle of
Debar in present-day western Macedonia,
August 18 27, 1944, but failed to capture
the city. The division also aided the German
army in its orderly withdrawal from the Balkans in October and November 1944.
Overall, the division, with a serious lack
of instructors, Albanian officers and noncommissioned officers was very poorly led.
Problems, such as insubordination, poor discipline, and looting and violence against
unarmed civilians, especially Serbs and suspected Communist Albanians, plagued the
unit. The Albanians often refused to fight or
to take orders, and the Germans had to disarm
several battalions and imprison a number of
Albanian officers. Many recruits deserted
with their new weapons and boots, and, by
October 1944, the division had dwindled to
about 3,500. Overall, the division never
became a significant combat force.
SS-Brigadefuhrer Schmidthuber was captured in 1945 and turned over to Yugoslav
authorities. In February 1947, a Yugoslav
military tribunal tried him on charges of

participating in massacres, deportations,


and atrocities against civilians and sentenced him to death by hanging. He was
executed on February 27, 1947.
Robert B. Kane
See also: Albania in World War II; Handschar
SS Division

Further Reading
Bishop, Chris. Waffen-SS Divisions, 193945.
London: Amber Books, 2007.
Blandford, Edmund L. Hitlers Second Army:
The Waffen SS. Osceola, WI: Motorbooks
International, 1994.
Fischer, Bernd J. Albania at War, 19391945.
West Lafayette, IN: Purdue University
Press, 1999.
Williamson, Gordon. Waffen-SS Handbook,
19331945. Stroud, UK: Sutton Publishing,
Ltd., 2005.

Slivnitsa, Battle of, 1885


The Battle of Slivnitsa was the main battle
of the Bulgarian-Serb War, fought near the
Bulgarian town of Slivnitsa during November 1719, 1885. On November 13, 1885,
the Serbian king, Milan Obrenovic (1854
1901), declared war on Bulgaria after
Bulgarian nationalists in Eastern Rumelia
declared its unification with Bulgaria on
September 18, 1885. The Serbian army
crossed the northwest border of Bulgaria in
three columns, intending to converge on
Sofia, the Bulgarian capital. The Serbians
ran into stiff resistance in the mountains,
giving Alexander von Battenberg (1857
1893), Prince of Bulgaria, time to deploy
his main forces into prepared defenses at
Slivnitsa, 22 miles northwest of Sofia. The
three Serbian center divisions halted near
Slivnitsa on November 16 to recover from
the fierce fighting in the Dragoman Pass.

Slovene War, 1991

On the evening of November 16,


Alexander arrived at Slivnitsa to find his
army in three miles of trenches along a
ridge in front of the village. Steep mountainous terrain lay on the right flank while the
easier Visker Hills towards Breznik, southwest of Slivnitsa, protected the Bulgarian
left flank. Around 10:00 a.m. the next morning, Alexander ordered three battalions to
advance on the right, surprising the Serbians
who eventually rallied and pushed them
back. The main Serbian attack occurred
against the Bulgarian center, but the Bulgarians forced the Serbians back. Bulgarian
reinforcements recaptured the heights on
the right and drove the Serbs back to the
road.
At daybreak, November 18, the Serbians
attacked the Bulgarian left flank, but Bulgarian reinforcements again arrived just in time
to prevent a breakthrough. The Bulgarians
repulsed further attacks in the center, causing heavy Serbian casualties. The next day,
two Serbian divisions attacked near Karnul
(now called Delyan) near Bresnik in an
attempt to join up with the Morava division.
The arrival of new Bulgarian troops from
Sofia held the Morava division in the Visker
Hills, and the flanking move failed.
Alexander now ordered a counterattack
which pushed the Serbians back on both
flanks. Nightfall prevented a complete collapse of the Serbian lines.
On November 20, the defeated Serbian
army began to retreat back to Serbia, ending
the battle. The Bulgarians suffered 1,800
casualties from the battle, and the Serbians,
2,100 casualties.
Robert B. Kane
See also: Alexander of Battenberg, Prince of
Bulgaria (18571893); Bulgarian-Serb War,
1885; Obrenovic, Milan (18541901)

Further Reading
Jelavich, Charles. Tsarist Russia and Balkan
Nationalism: Russian Influence in the Internal Affairs of Bulgaria and Serbia, 1879
1886. Berkeley: University of California
Press, 1958.
Jelavich, Charles, and Barbara Jelavich. The
Establishment of the Balkan National
States, 18041920. Seattle: University of
Washington Press, 1977.
Pavlowitch, Stevan K. A History of the Balkans,
18041945. London: Longman, 1999.

Slovene War, 1991


The Slovene War of 1991, also known as the
Ten Days War, was a short conflict that
began the disintegration of Yugoslavia and
established the first independent Slovene
state. After the election of the overtly
nationalistic Slobodan Milos evic (1941
2006) as president of the Yugoslav Federal
Republic of Serbia in 1990 using federal
monies, many Slovenes began to consider
disassociation from Yugoslavia. As citizens
of the wealthiest of the six federal Yugoslav
republics, the Slovenes had little desire to
fund Serbian nationalist aspirations. A referendum on December 23, 1990, demonstrated
that the majority of Slovenes favored
independence. While the leaders of Ljubljana
government, including President Milan
Kucan (1941), hoped to avoid armed conflict
with the federal state, they took measures to
strengthen the Territorial Defense (TO) forces
at their disposal. These TOs were established
as a part of the Yugoslav Peoples Army
(JNA) strategy to repel a foreign invasion
by small units trained in guerilla tactics.
Because Slovenia, unlike much of the rest
of Yugoslavia, was relatively ethnically
homogeneous, these forces could be relied

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Slovene War, 1991

A Slovenian frontier guard patrols in front of


the new sign of the Republica Slovenija at
the Yugoslavian-Austrian frontier station of
Spielfeld-Sentilj, June 26, 1991. (AP Photo/
Gepa)

upon to support the Ljubljana government


against the federal government in Belgrade.
In particular the Slovene defense minister,
Janez Jansa (1958), prepared the Slovene
TO for the pending conflict with the JNA.
He procured arms and promoted the JNAs
own guerrilla tactics for use against the JNA.
Because Yugoslavia had maintained almost
universal male military obligation, Jans a
could draw upon a large contingent of Slovene males with military training.
Slovenia declared independence from
Yugoslavia on June 25, 1991. The Slovene
TO immediately acted to establish control
of Slovenias borders and main airport. The
next day, June 26, the JNS responded by

sending units into Slovenia to reassert


federal authority. That same day, the Slovene TO shot down two JNA helicopters.
The fighting between the TO and the JNA
escalated over the course of the next five
days. In many instances, the TO successfully employed guerilla tactics to disrupt
JNA movements and concentrations. The
TO also surrounded JNA bases within
Slovenia.
Meanwhile efforts to resolve the crisis
with diplomacy emerged in several European capitals. In response, the Slovene
government announced a unilateral ceasefire on July 2. The JNA accepted the ceasefire the next day. By that time, the Slovene
TO had managed to assert control over
most of the frontier crossing and to overwhelm most of the JNA installations within
Slovenia. After both sides agreed to a
cease-fire, the JNA withdrew its forces
from Slovenian territory. Most of its equipment remained in Slovenia. Quickly thereafter, representatives of the Yugoslav
federal government, Croatia, Slovenia, and
the European Community met on the Adriatic Coast of Croatia. There on July 7, they
signed the so-called Brioni (Bjrjuni) accord.
This ended the efforts to the JNA to prevent
Slovene independence. The attendees
agreed that Slovenia and Croatia could separate from federal Yugoslavia.
The Slovene War demonstrated the determination of the Slovenian people to achieve
national independence for the first time in
their history. It also showed the effectiveness
of the small-unit guerilla tactics of the Slovene TO. The Slovenes demonstrated high
morale at all times. Not so their JNA opponents. The JNA leadership, itself mostly Serbian and Montenegrin, failed to meet the
challenge of the Slovene TO. Many JNA
soldiers of Bosniak, Croatian, Kosovar, and
Macedonian origin had little interest in

Smyrna, Destruction of, 1922

fighting for the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia or for the nationalist leadership of
Serbia. Nevertheless, some Slovene soldiers
did fight and die for the JNA. Among the
Slovene JNA casualties was one of the helicopter pilots shot down on June 26. The
Slovene TO forces lost 18 killed and 182
wounded. The JNA suffered 44 killed and
146 wounded. Some civilians also lost their
lives in the conflict. Probably the most significant casualty of the war was the JNA
itself. This brief conflict indicated that the
conscript-based JNA was not effective in a
national context. After the Slovene War of
1991, the JNA ceased to be an effective
federal force. Those who remained in the
JNA were for the most part committed to
the Serbian nationalist cause.
The relatively quick and easy Slovene
victory also demonstrated that the nationalist Serbian leadership was willing to allow
territories without significant Serbian populations to leave Yugoslavia. At the same
time, this increased their determination to
retain areas of mixed population with strong
Serbian elements, such as Bosnia and the
Krajina region of Croatia. In this way, the
Slovene independence made the efforts of
the Bosnians and Croats to separate themselves from Yugoslavia more difficult.
In the aftermath of the war, the European
Community recognized Slovene independence on January 15, 1992. Slovenia joined
the United Nations in May of the same year.
In 2004, Slovenia joined the EU and NATO.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Brioni Agreement; JNA (Yugoslav
Peoples Army); Yugoslav Wars, 19911995;
Yugoslav Wars, 19911995, Causes

Further Reading
Magas, Branka. The Destruction of Yugoslavia: Tracking the Breakup, 19801992.
New York: Verso, 1993.

Rogel, Carole. The Breakup of Yugoslavia and


the War in Bosnia. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1998.
Silber, Laura, and Allan Little. Yugoslavia:
Death of a Nation. New York: TV Books,
1996.
U.S. Central Intelligence Agency. Balkan
Battlegrounds: A Military History of the
Yugoslav Conflict, 19901995. 2 vols.
Washington, DC: Central Intelligence
Agency, 20022003.

Smyrna, Destruction of, 1922


The destruction of Smyrna is also known as
the Great Smyrna Fire (September 1317,
1922). Smyrna (Izmir) was a cosmopolitan
city since ancient times, and during the
time of the fire, the influx of immigrants
from the inner parts of Anatolia had swelled
its population to turn it into a large Christian
metropolis. The city had been under Greek
occupation in the period 19191922.
The Greek armys advance into Anatolia,
which had begun with its occupation of
Smyrna on May 15, 1919, came to a decisive
end with the Turkish victories at the Battle
of Sakarya in August and September 1921
and of Dumlupnar in August 1922. As the
Greek forces withdrew after this defeat,
they retreated all the way to Smyrna while
setting fire to some towns and villages
along the way. The inhabitants of Smyrna
were afraid that the city might share the
same fate as several localities in western
Anatolia that were burned down by the
Greek army; but the Greek forces did not
attempt at starting a fire in Smyrna, where
a large Christian population still lived.
When the Turkish army entered the city,
the Greek forces had already left on September 9, 1922. After the recapture of the city
by the Turks, there was some pillaging and
some other events of violence, which

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Srebrenica Massacre, 1995

increased the nervousness among the


populace.
The fire started on September 13 and
lasted until September 17. The first fire
broke out in the Armenian quarter, which
was soon joined by other fires in and around
the same quarter. With the help of the windy
weather, fire spread to a large area including
the Greek and European quarters. While
Muslim and Jewish quarters were not
harmed, quarters inhabited by Greeks and
the Armenians suffered considerable damage. The fire destroyed a large part of the
city, caused many deaths, and forced many
more to leave the city.
Responsibility for the fire has been a hotly
contested topic. Diplomatic sources are not
in unanimous in this regard. Greeks and
Armenians argue that the fire was deliberately started by the Turks, while Turkish
sources insist that either the Armenians or
the Greeks were responsible.
zcan
Ahmet O
See also: Greco-Turkish War, 19191922;
Sakarya River, Battle of, 1921

Further Reading
Boke, Pelin. Izmir 19191922. Istanbul: Tanklklar, 2006.
Lowry, Heath. Turkish History: On Whose
Sources Will It Be Based? A Case Study
on the Burning of Izmir. Osmanl Arastrmalar Dergisi 9 (1988).
Milton, Giles. Paradise Lost Smyrna 1922: The
Destruction of a Christian City in the Islamic
World. New York: Basic Books, 2008.

Srebrenica Massacre, 1995


The Srebrenica Massacre was the worst
massacre on European soil since the
Holocaust. Srebrenica is located near the
Drina River in eastern Bosnia. After the collapse of Yugoslavia and outbreak of civil

war in 1992, this predominantly Bosniak


(Bosnian Muslim) town successfully
defended itself against the advance of the
Bosnian Serb Army (BSA) in the spring of
1992. The Serbs conducted a wide-scale
ethnic cleansing of the region, expelling
Bosniaks and increasing the Serbian population. Besieged by the BSA, Srebrenica was
isolated from Bosniak-controlled territories
to the west and was dependent on humanitarian aid provided by the UN Protection
Force (UNPROFOR). Nevertheless, the
Bosniaks, under command of Naser Oric,
successfully repelled the Serbian forces
throughout 1992 and early 1993. In the
spring of 1993, the United Nations declared
Srebrenica a safe area, along with five
other Bosnian Muslim cities (Bihac, Gorazde, Sarajevo, Tuzla, and Zepa) then under
siege at the hands of the Bosnian Serbs.
Despite its new status, Srebrenica was
never properly defended by UNPROFOR
and constantly suffered extreme privation
as the Serbs tested the UN resolves by
blocking aid convoys. Of over UN 30,000
troops requested for Bosnian Muslim safe
areas, only 7,600 were forthcoming, of
which 750 Dutch troops were deployed at
Srebrenica. The UN troops were lightly
armed and operated under stringent mandate
that made them powerless to successfully
engage either of the conflicting sides.
By 1995, after almost three years of resistance, Srebrenica became a symbol of Bosniak resistance, only further increasing the
citys importance. In July 1995, encouraged
by UN vacillation over whether or not to
maintain the safe areas, the BSA forces
under the command of General Ratko Mladic (1942) launched a major campaign to
capture Srebrenica. The UNPROFOR troops
failed to stop the BSA offensive because of a
lack of support further up the UN chain of
command. As the Serbian forces overran

Stalingrad, Battle of, 19421943

the enclave, over 15,000 Bosniaks fled into


the woods while many sought shelter at the
UNPROFOR base at nearby Potocari,
where the members of the Dutch peacekeepers sheltered about 8,000 Bosnian Muslims.
The Serb forces overrun the UN base and,
after separating women from men, began a
methodical killing of the Bosnian Muslims.
It is impossible to arrive at precise numbers
of the killed, but best estimates point to
between 7,000 and 8,000 men killed.
The Srebrenica Massacre became the worst
single war crime of the entire Bosnian conflict
and the worst case of mass murder in Europe
since the end of World War II. It also stands
as a symbol of the failure by the international
community, and especially the United Nations,
to prevent mass murders. The massacre
resulted in the indictment of numerous Serbian
commanders, including Mladic, as war criminals by the International Criminal Tribunal
for the Former Yugoslavia at The Hague.
Alexander Mikaberidze
See also: Bosnian War, 19921995; Mladic,
Ratko (1943); UNPROFOR; Yugoslav Wars,
19911995

Further Reading
Cigar, Norman. Genocide in Bosnia: The Policy of Ethnic Cleansing. College Station:
Texas A&M University Press, 1995.
Honig, Jan Willem and Norbert Both, Srebrenica, Record of a War Crime. New York:
Penguin, 1996.
Rohde, David. A Safe Area, Srebrenica:
Europes Worst Massacre since the Second
World War. London: Pocket Books, 1997.

Stalingrad, Battle of, 19421943


Some hold that the Battle of Stalingrad, one
of the epic battles of World War II, was the
turning point on the Eastern Front. The

Battle of Stalingrad, the first large encirclement of a German army in the war, gave
the Soviets a psychological lift and the military initiative. Sharing in the German defeat
were several allied forces, especially those
of the Romanians.
In spring 1942, Adolf Hitler placed major
emphasis in the summer campaign on the
southern portion of the German-Soviet
Front in Operation Blau (Blue). Hitler sent
General Fedor von Bocks (18801945)
Army Group South east from around Kursk
to secure Voronezh, which fell to the Germans on July 6. Hitler then reorganized his
southern forces into Army Groups A and B.
General Siegmund W. List (18801971)
had command of the southern formation,
Army Group A; General Maximilian von
Weichs (18811954) commanded the
northern formation, Army Group B.
Hitlers original plan called for Army
Groups A and B to cooperate in a great
effort to secure the Don and Donets Valleys
and capture the cities of Rostov and Stalingrad. The two army groups could then
move southeast to capture the oil fields that
were so important to the Red Army. On
July 13, Hitler ordered a change of plans,
demanding the simultaneous capture of
Stalingrada major industrial center and
key crossing point on the Volga Riverand
the Caucasus. Dividing the effort placed further strains on already inadequate German
resources, especially on logistical support.
This also meant that inevitably a gap would
appear between the two German army
groups, enabling most Soviet troops caught
in the Don River bend to escape eastward.
Meanwhile, on July 23, Army Group A captured Rostov. It then crossed the Don River
and advanced deep into the Caucasus, reaching to within 70 miles of the Caspian Sea.
Hitler now intervened again, slowing the
advance of General Friedrich Pauluss

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Stalingrad, Battle of, 19421943

(18901957) Sixth Army of Army Group B


toward Stalingrad when he detached General Hermann Hoths (18851971) Fourth
Panzer Army to join Army Group A to help
secure the Caucasus oil fields. Nonetheless,
the Sixth Army reached the Volga north of
Stalingrad on August 23.
The great city of Stalingrad curved for
some 20 miles along the high western bank
of the Volga River. Hitlers original intent
was merely to control the river by gunfire
and to destroy the citys arms factories,
notably the Tractor, Red October, and Barricades works; but now he demanded a full
occupation of the Soviet dictators namesake city.
To meet the German thrust toward Stalingrad, on July 12, 1942, the Soviet General
Staff had formed the Stalingrad Front. It
consisted of the Sixty-second, Sixty-third,
and Sixty-fourth Armies. The Twenty-first
Army and the Eighth Air Army were also
integrated into the Stalingrad Front. General
Vasily Chuikov (19001982), a protege of
Marshal Georgii Zhukov (18961974), commanded the Sixty-second Army, which was
holding on the west bank of the Volga.
Josef Stalin, meanwhile, rushed reinforcements and supplies to Stalingrad.
Angry over the slow progress of the Sixth
Army into Stalingrad, Hitler on August 11,
ordered Hoths Fourth Army from the
Caucasus north to that place, leaving a
badly depleted Army Group A holding a
500-mile front and stalling the southernmost
drive. Hitler also ordered his sole strategic
reserve in the area, Field Marshal Erich von
Mansteins (18871973) Eleventh Army,
north to Leningrad.
Such wide-ranging shifts of German resources took a terrible toll on men but especially on equipment. They also consumed
precious fuel and stretched the German
lines far beyond what was reasonable or

safe. German army High Command chief


of staff General Franz Halder (18841972)
and other German generals grew more and
more alarmed. They pointed out to Hitler
that the German army in Russia now had to
maintain a front of more than 2,000 miles.
Between the two armies of Army Group B,
a sole division held a 240-mile gap. North
of Stalingrad, Romanian troops protected
the single railroad bringing supplies to the
Sixth Army. The possibilities open to the
Soviets were enormous, provided they had
the resources available. Hitler claimed they
did not. Halder continued warning Hitler
and tried to get him to break off the battle
for Stalingrad. This time, Hitler sacked
Halder. He also relieved List, and from a distance of 1,200 miles, Hitler took personal
command of Army Group A, which was
nominally under General Paul L. E. von
Kleist (18811954). The irony is that the
Germans might have taken Stalingrad in
July had Hitler not diverted Hoth south to
assist Kleist.
Beginning on August 24, a costly battle of
attrition raged over Stalingrad. Luftwaffe
carpet bombing at the end of August killed
some 40,000 people, but it also turned the
city into defensive bastions of ruined buildings and rubble. Stalin refused to allow the
evacuation of the civilian population, believing that this would force the defenders,
especially local militia forces, to fight more
tenaciously.
The ruined city posed a formidable
obstacle. Germanys strength lay in maneuver warfare, but Hitler compelled the Sixth
Army to engage the Soviet strength of static
defense. Stalin ordered the city held at all
costs, and Soviet forces resisted doggedly.
To make things as difficult as possible for
German artillery and aviation, Chuikov
ordered his troops to keep within 50 yards
of the Germans. Zhukov, who had just been

Stalingrad, Battle of, 19421943

appointed deputy supreme commander


second in authority only to Stalinarrived
at Stalingrad on August 29, to take overall
charge of operations.
Meanwhile, Hitler became obsessed with
Stalingrad, and he wore down his army in
repeated attempts to capture that symbol of
defiance. Taking Stalingrad was unnecessary from a military point of view; the 16th
Panzer Division at Rynok controlled the
Volga with its guns, closing it to northsouth shipping. But Hitler insisted the city
itself be physically taken.
For a month, the Sixth Army pressed
slowly forward, but casualties in the battle
of attrition were enormous on both sides,
with advances measured in yards. The battle
disintegrated into a block-by-block, houseby-houseeven room-by-roomstruggle
for survival.
General Paulus has been blamed for
refusing to disobey Hitlers order to stand
firm and extracting his army before it was
too late, but his and Hitlers greatest failing
lay in not anticipating the Soviet encirclement. Nor did Paulus possess mobile tank
reserve to counter such a Soviet effort and
keep open a supply corridor. The Romanians
posted on the northern flank warned of the
danger of Soviet bridgeheads over the Don,
and asked to eliminate them. The Germans
refused permission. Romanian dictator General Ion Antonescu (18821946) warned
Hitler about the perilous position of the
Romanian forces, to no avail.
While he fed the cauldron of Stalingrad
with only sufficient troops absolutely necessary to hold the city, Zhukov patiently
assembled 1 million men in four fronts
(army groups) for a great double envelopment. This deep movement, Operation Uranus, began on November 19 and was timed
to coincide with the frosts that would make
Soviet cross-country tank maneuvers

possible against Axis infantry. For the


northern pincer, the Soviets assembled
3,500 guns and heavy mortars to blast a
hole for three tank and two cavalry corps
and a dozen infantry divisions. They
encountered eight Romanian infantry divisions and two cavalry divisions of the
Romanian Third Army. The Romanians
fought bravely, but their 37 mm guns and
light Skoda tanks were no match for the
Soviet T-34s. The southern Soviet prong of
two corps, one mechanized and the other
cavalry, broke through on November 20,
against five Romanian infantry divisions
and two cavalry divisions of the Romanian
Fourth Army. Both Romanian army formations were destroyed in the Red Army
breakthrough.
By November 23, the forces of Operation
Uranus had encircled the Sixth Army and
had driven some units of the Fourth Army
into the pocket. Hitler now ordered Manstein from the Leningrad Front and gave
him a new formationArmy Group Don,
drawn from Army Group Awith instructions to rectify the situation.
Hitler forbade any withdrawal, convinced
that the Sixth Army could be resupplied
from the air. Reichsmarschall (Reich
Marshal) Hermann Goering (18931946) is
usually blamed for assuring Hitler that this
could be done, but responsibility is more
properly shared among Goering, chief of
the General Staff of the Luftwaffe General
Hans Jeschonnek (18991943), and Hitler.
Hitler was no doubt misled by Luftwaffe
success the previous winter in supplying by
parachute drops 5,000 German troops surrounded at Kholm near Moscow and
100,000 men at Demyansk.
The decision that Stalingrad could be supplied by air was taken at a time when the
Soviets enjoyed air superiority. By November 20, the second day of Uranus, the

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Stalingrad, Battle of, 19421943

Soviets committed between 1,350 and 1,414


combat aircraft (depending on the source) to
Stalingrad. Meanwhile, General Wolfram F.
Von Richtofens (18951945) Luftflotte 4,
flying in support of the Sixth Army, had
732 combat aircraft, of which only 402
were operational. The Soviets used their air
superiority to attack German army positions
and for bombing raids on the main Ju-52
base at Zverevo, where they destroyed a
substantial number of German transport aircraft. Worsening weather impeded the relief
effort, and much of the Luftwaffes airlift
capability was redeployed to resupply Axis
troops in North Africa after Allied landings
there in early November.
A fair appraisal of air transport available,
even in the best weather conditions, was that
the Luftwaffe could only bring in one-tenth
of the Sixth Armys requirements. By the last
week in December, the Luftwaffe delivered
only an average 129 tons of supplies a day,
condemning the German forces in the pocket
to slow starvation and death. Then, on January 16, 1943, the Soviets took Pitomnik, the
principal airfield within the Stalingrad pocket.
Its loss was the death blow to the airlift operation. During the last days of the battle, supplies were dropped only by parachute, and
many of the supplies fell into Soviet hands.
Hitler still refused to authorize any
attempt by the Sixth Army to escape. He
would allow only a linking up of a relief
force. None of the hard-won territory was
to be surrendered, but it was simply impossible for the Sixth Army to link up with a
relief force and not surrender territory in
the process. Paulus favored a breakout, but
he was not prepared to gamble either his
army or his career. Mansteins force of
three understrength panzer divisions managed to reach within 35 miles of Sixth
Army positions, and he urged a fait accompli, forcing Hitler to accept it. However,

Paulus replied with a pessimistic assessment


of his armys ability to close the short distance to reach Mansteins relief force.
There was insufficient fuel, the horses had
mostly been eaten, and it would take weeks
to prepare. The relieving forces would have
to come closer. A linkup could succeed
only if the Sixth Army pushed from the
other side against the Soviets, but this
could not be done without shrinking the Stalingrad pocket, which Hitler forbade.
In mid-December, the Volga froze,
allowing the Soviets to use vehicles to cross
the ice. During the next seven weeks, Zhukov
sent 35,000 vehicles across the river along
with 122 mm howitzers to blast the German
defensive works. By then, seven Soviet
armies surrounded the Sixth Army, and breakout was impossible. Even in this hopeless situation, Paulus refused to disobey Hitler and
order a surrender. He himself surrendered on
January 31 (he maintained he had been
taken by surprise), but he refused to order
his men to do the same. The last German
units capitulated on February 2.
There may have been 294,000 men trapped
at Stalingrad, including Hiwis (Soviet auxiliaries working with the Germans) and Romanians. Of only 91,000 men (including 22
generals) taken prisoner by the Soviets,
fewer than 5,000 survived the war and Soviet
captivity. The last Germans taken prisoner at
Stalingrad were not released until 1955.
Including casualties in Allied units and the
rescue attempts, Axis forces lost upward of
half a million men. The Stalingrad campaign
may have cost the Soviets 1.1 million casualties, more than 485,000 dead.
The effect of the Battle of Stalingrad on
the German war effort has been hotly
debated. It is frequently seen as the turning
point in the European theater of war, the
decisive defeat from which the Wehrmacht
could never recover; but militarily,

Stamboliski, Aleksandur

Stalingrad was not irredeemable. The


German front lines had been largely recreated
in the time the remnants of the Sixth Army
surrendered. Stalingrad was more important
for its psychological than its military value.
If any single battle denied Germany victory,
it was Kursk, still six months and several
German successes away. For the Romanians,
the Battle of Stalingrad was an unmitigated
disaster. Two entire armies were destroyed.
The Romanians lost around 140,000 men.
The losses in manpower and equipment
amounted to around half of that available to
Romanias army. This made Stalingrad an
even greater disaster for the Romanians than
for the Germans.
Eva-Maria Stolberg and Spencer C. Tucker
See also: Antonescu, Ion (18821946); Romania in World War II

Further Reading
Axworthy, Mark, Cornel Scafes, and Cristian
Craciunoiu. Third Axis, Fourth Ally: Romanian Armed Forces in the European War,
19411945. London: Arms and Armour,
1995.
Beevor, Antony. Stalingrad: The Fateful Siege,
19421943. New York: Viking, 1998.
Hayward, Joel S. A. Stopped at Stalingrad:
The Luftwaffe and Hitlers Defeat in the
East, 19421943. Lawrence: University
Press of Kansas, 1998.
Istoriia Velikoi Otechestvennoi voiny Sovetskogo Soiuza, 19411945. Moscow: Voennoe Izdatelstvo, 1961.
Seaton, Albert. The Russo-German War, 1941
1945. New York: Praeger, 1971.

Stamboliski, Aleksandur
(18791923)
Bulgarian prime minister, born on March 1,
1879, in the village of Slavovitsa, near

Pazardzhik in west central Bulgaria, Aleksandur Stamboliski was educated in Bulgaria and Germany. Stamboliski involved
himself in peasant politics from an early
age, and after the turn of the century, he
became a leader in the Bulgarian National
Agrarian Union (BANU), the most important Bulgarian peasant political party. He
was elected to the Bulgarian parliament
(Subranie) in 1908 and there became the
party leader three years later.
Stamboliski was a strong adversary of
Bulgarian irredentism. He opposed the policies that led to the Balkan Wars of 1912
1913 and Bulgarian participation in these
wars, arguing that peasants were the victims
of such policies and had little to gain from a
Greater Bulgaria. In a stormy audience with
Czar Ferdinand on the eve of Bulgarias
entry into World War I, Stamboliski warned
the czar that he was risking the future of
the monarchy in the upcoming struggle.
Stamboliski subsequently was imprisoned,
only obtaining release as Bulgaria collapsed
and unrest spread especially among warweary peasant soldiers in September 1918.
Bulgarian authorities apparently hoped
that Stamboliski would allay some of the
turmoil. Although not initially involved
in the disorders, Stamboliski served as
president of the ephemeral Radomir Republic, which loyal Bulgarian and German
forces suppressed in October. In 1919,
Stamboliski became prime minister and
established a heavy-handed government
that sought to bring to justice those politicians whose policies had led to Bulgarias
defeats in the Balkan Wars and World War
I. At the same time, he pursued policies of
reconciliation with Bulgarias neighbors.
On March 23, 1923, Stamboliski signed the
convention of Nish with the Kingdom of
Serbs, Croats and Slovenes (Yugoslavia).
With this agreement, Stamboliski promised

297

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Stepanovic, Stepa

to suppress the Internal Macedonian


Revolutionary Organization (IMRO, or
VMRO), which was then carrying out operations against Yugoslavia from Bulgarian
territory. IMRO members as well as other
opponents of Stamboliskis foreign and
domestic policies murdered him on
June 14, 1923, at his farm in Slavovitsa, cutting off the hand that had signed the Nish
treaty. Stamboliski had been a forceful
advocate of the political and economic
rights of the Bulgarian peasantry, the vast
majority of the population.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Bulgaria in World War I; Dobro
Pole, Battle of, 1918

Further Reading
Bell, John D. Peasants in Power: Alexander
Stamboliski and the Bulgarian National
Union, 18991923. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1977.
Crampton, R. J. A Short History of Modern
Bulgaria. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1987.
Petkov, Nikola (Nikola Dimitrov). Aleksandar
Stambolijski, njegova lichnost i ideje. Beograd, Yugoslavia: Radenkovich, 1933.

Stepanovic, Stepa (18561929)


One of the leading military figures in the
history of late-nineteenth- and earlytwentieth-century Serbia, Stepa Stepanovic
was born on March 11, 1856, near Belgrade.
He joined the Serbian army as a cadet in
1874 and became an artillery officer.
Stepanovic rose to prominence through
his command of the Serbian Second Army
during the First Balkan War of 19121913.
Initially the Second Army advanced into
eastern Macedonia from Bulgarian territory.
It was to cut off any Ottoman retreat down
the Vardar River valley. In response to a

Bulgarian request at the end of October,


however, the Serbian Second Army moved
into Thrace to augment the Bulgarian Second Army in its siege of the Ottoman fortress city of Adrianople (Odrin, Erdine).
There the Serbs deployed on the western
perimeter. The Serbian Second Army joined
the Bulgarians in the final assault on the city
on March 26, 1913. After helping to take the
city, Stepanovic and his army returned to
Serbia. He continued to command the
Serbian Second Army through the Second
Balkan War, fighting against his erstwhile
allies in eastern Serbia and northwestern
Bulgaria.
During World War I, Stepanovic and his
Second Army gained the first Entente victory of the war when he defeated the initial
Austro-Hungarian invasion of Serbia during
15-29 August 1529, 1914 at the Battle of
Cer Mountain. For this success, he gained
the rank of Vojvoda (Field Marshal). Still
leading the Second Army, he subsequently
participated in a victory against AustroHungarian invasions at the battle of
Kolubara on December 4, 1914.
Stepanovic continued to command the
Serbian Second Army on the Macedonian
Front from 1916 to 1918 and participated
in the decisive Franco-Serbian victory over
the Bulgarians at Dobro Pole in Septem acak, Yugoslavia, on
ber 1918. He died in C
April 29, 1929.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Adrianople, Siege of, 19121913;
Cer Mountain, Battle of, 1914; Dobro Pole,
Battle of, 1918; Serbia in World War I

Further Reading
Alimpic, Milovoje. Solunski front. Belgrade:
Vojnoizdavachki zavod, 1967.
Mitrovic, Andrej. Serbias Great War, 1914
1918. West Lafayette, IN: Purdue University Press, 2007.

Storm, Operation, 1995


Skoko, Savo, and Petar Opachich. Vojvoda
Stepa Stepanovich u ratovima Srbije 1876
1918. 2 vols. Belgrade: Beogradski
izdavacho-grafichki zavod, 1984.

Storm, Operation, 1995


Operation Storm was a rapidly successful
offensive launched by the military forces of
the Republic of Croatia on August 4, 1995,
against the Republic of Serbian Krajina.
The success of the offensive ended the Serbian attempt to establish an independent
region within Croatia based on the Serbian
ethnicity along the border with Bosnia.
The United Nations brokered a cease-fire
in January 1992 between the Republic of
Croatia and Serbia, which controlled the
remaining core of the old Yugoslavias military, the Yugoslav Peoples Army (JNA).
The fighting during 1991 established the
ethnically Serbian regions within Croatia as
the Republic of Serbian Krajina, mainly the
eastern-center and far eastern areas of Croatia. These Serbian-controlled regions failed
to gain international recognition. Serbian
forces ethnically cleansed approximately
85,000 Croats from the region forces by the
end of 1991. The UN forces (UNPROFOR)
monitored the cease-fire between Croatia
and the JNA. Serbian Krajina officials, however, did not agree to this arrangement until
April 6, 1993.
Both sides regularly violated the provisions of the cease-fire. These violations
included incursions by the Croatian military
and destruction of Serbian villages in UNprotected areas. Between 1992 and 1995,
the Republic of Croatia managed to obtain
modern weaponry for its military in the
face of a poorly enforced UN arms embargo.
Croatias military also received training
from the United States starting in September

of 1994. The Republic of Serbian Krajina


military was armed with equipment left
behind by the withdrawal of the JNA from
Croatia in May 1992.
On August 4, 1995, the Republic of Croatia launched Operation Storm, a rapid
offensive to seize control of Serbian Krajina.
The offensive opened with the Croatian Air
Force targeting the Krajina Serb communication systems. With coordinating artillery,
approximately 100,000 troops of the Croatian army attacked along an approximately
700-kilometer front with a strategic focus
on retaking the city of Knin (southwestern
ervenko
Croatia). General Zvonimir C
(19262001) commanded the Croatian
army. The Serbian Krajina forces had poor
equipment, were far fewer in number, and
were poorly organized. Milan Martic
(1954), the internationally unrecognized
president of Serbian Krajina in 1995,
ordered the evacuation of Serbian civilians
to villages bordering the Serbian held areas
of Bosnia on August 4. Many of the Serbian
Krajina soldiers fled the region at the start of
the offensive. 10,000 United Nations troops
were also present in the Krajina region.
Many UN posts came under fire during the
offensive. The United Nations negotiated the
withdrawal of disarmed Serbian Krajina soldiers who had been fighting in surrounded
pockets on August 8. Most organized Serbian
resistance in the Krajina region was over by
August 9.
The completely successful military offensive lasted less than four days, but ethnic
cleansing operations continued for months
resulting in about 200,000 ethnic Serbs fleeing the Krajina region of Croatia. Some Krajina Serb refugees stayed in northern
Bosnia, but most eventually settled in the
Vojvodina or Kosovo regions of Serbia.
Many of the Serbian refugees joined in ethnic cleansing activities after arriving at the

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Suleyman Husnu Pasha

Banja Luka area of northern Bosnia and the


Vojvodina region of northern Serbia. The Croatian offensive was also coordinated with an
offensive by the Bosnian government against
Serb held and other areas in Bosnia. Bosnian
army soldiers from the region surrounding
the neighboring city of Bihac also entered
the Krajina region in the following months to
join in the looting and destruction of property
held by Serbs.
Operation Storm was a successful military offensive that reclaimed the Krajina
region of Croatia for the Republic of Croatia. After Operation Storm, the only major
area still held by separatist Serbian forces
was the Slavonia region of eastern Croatia.
Unlike the Krajina region, the Slavonia
region remained supported by the JNA and
would be the subject of negotiated talks
during the final stages of the Yugoslav
Wars.
Operation Storm was also the military
basis for a successful ethnic cleansing oper ermak
ation. Croatian army general Ivan C
(1949), who was in command of a corps
assaulting Knin, was charged with war
crimes but acquitted in 2011 by the
International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia. Croatian army general
Ante Gotovina (1955), a top commander
of Operation Storm, and Mladen Markac
(1955), the commander of special police
during Operation Storm, were found guilty
of war crimes and crimes against humanity
in 2011. The verdict was overturned on
appeal on November 16, 2012, when the
court declared in a 32 vote that the defendants had not engaged in a conspiracy to
commit a joint criminal enterprise. Other
Croatian commanders and politicians were
indicted by the Tribunal but died before a
trial could be held. Milan Martic was found
guilty of a joint criminal enterprise involving war crimes and crimes against humanity

by the Tribunal and sentenced to 35 years in


prison on June 12, 2007.
Brian G. Smith
See also: Croat Forces, 19911995; Croat
War, 19911995; Yugoslav Wars, 19911995;
Yugoslav Wars, 19911995, Causes

Further Reading
Croatia: Impunity for Abuses Committed
during Operation Storm and the Denial of
the Right of Refugees to Return to the Krajina. Human Rights Watch/Helsinki Report
8, no. 13 (August 1996).
U.S. Central Intelligence Agency. Office of
Russian and European Analysis. Balkan
Battlefields: A Military History of the Yugoslav Conflict, 19911995. Washington, DC:
Central Intelligence Agency, 2002. 2 vols.
Weiss, Thomas, and Don Hubert. The Responsibility to Protect: Research, Bibliography,
Background. Ottawa: International Development Research Centre, 2001.
Zanic, Ivo, and Branka Magas, eds. The War in
Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina, 1991
1995. London: Frank Cass Publishers,
2001.

Suleyman Husnu Pasha


(18381892)
Su leyman Hu snu Pasha was an Ottoman
pasha who was active in such important
events in the late Ottoman period as the deposition of Sultan Abdulaziz (18301876),
passage to a constitutional monarchy, and
declaration of the constitution, and who led
military operations in the Balkans in 1876
1878.
Suleyman was born in Constantinople in
1838. He is best known in Turkey as the
Hero of Shipka and as one of the pioneers
of Turkish nationalism. He graduated from
the military high school and military college
and commissioned as an infantry officer in

Suleyman Husnu Pasha

1860. Except during his service at the military academy, he fought against rebels, bandits, or tribal warriors in nearly every corner
of the empire from Balkan provinces of Serbia, Herzegovina and Montenegro to Crete,
Yemen, and Asir. He was promoted to the
rank of brigadier general while working as
a lecturer at the Military College. One year
later, he was appointed as the superintendent
of the military academy and other military
schools (1873). He was instrumental in
launching important military educational
reforms such as enrolling cadets from Christian groups, introducing new regulations and
academic curricula that were formulated
according to latest French military models.
Suleyman joined a conspiracy to dethrone
Sultan Abdulaziz. Under the leadership of
Huseyin Avni Pasha (18201876), the conspirators persuaded theology students and
common people to riot in front of the grand
viziers offices. After the tension increased,
Suleyman Pasha ordered the cadet battalion
and several other military units to occupy
the palace. The conspirators dethroned the
sultan on May 30, 1876. The new sultan
Abdulhamid II was understandable highly
uncomfortable with the key figures of the
coup detat. He assigned Suleyman Pasha
to the Montenegro border to fight against
Serbian and Montenegrin military and rebels. Suleyman Pasha first organized a successful defense against the conventional
and unconventional attackers and repulsed
them to Montenegro.
Due to his recently gained fame, Suleyman was assigned as the Balkan Corps commander immediately after the first phase of
the Russo-Ottoman War of 18771878. His
main task was to recapture Shipka (Spka)
Pass, which was a key passage in the midst
of Bulgaria. He was deeply resentful of
being under the command of the Germanborn Mehmed Ali Pasha (Ludwig Karl

Friedrich Detroit; (18271878), who was


junior in rank and status. Suleyman Pasha
reached the Balkan ridges with his two veteran divisions of the Montenegrin Campaign
on July 23, 1877. He wasted an excellent
opportunity at Eski Zagra because of discord
with his subordinates.
Su leyman Pasha launched his longawaited assault on August 21, two days after
conducting a reconnaissance. His battlehardened divisions launched repeated attacks
through rugged mountainous terrain under
terrible Russian artillery fire for four days
and nights. It was an impossible mission
under the conditions. The Balkan Corps lost
one-fourth of its combat strength. Suleyman
Pasha refused to accept the futility of a continuation of assaults against Shipka. His
immense self-esteem and hatred of Mehmed
Ali Pasha prevented him from joining forces
with Mehmed Ali Pasha in order to make
use of the opportunities created by the defenders of Pleven (Plevne), who attracted an
important percentage of the Russian army.
The Balkan Corps remained stuck in front
of Shipka until the assignment of Suleyman
Pasha as the new Serdar of the Balkan front
on September 26. As the new commander of
the Balkan front, Suleyman Pasha finally
understood the importance of relieving Pleven
and destroying the main Russian army. However, his two archenemies, Rauf Pasha and
Mehmed Ali Pasha, were the commanders of
two important corps which he had no control.
Out of frustration, Suleyman Pasha launched
several limited attacks in the direction of
Pleven. Some of them, like the battle of
Elena on December 4, actually achieved their
planned objectives, but these local successes
failed to relieve Pleven because of a lack of
support (which was compounded by a lack
of knowledge about enemy vulnerabilities).
The fall of Pleven released the Russian
army. Su leyman Pasha tried his best to

301

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Suleyman Husnu Pasha

conduct a fighting retreat with nearly seven


brigades, but he managed only to delay the
Russian onslaught for a few days. Most of
his units were encircled or disintegrated at
some stage of the withdrawal. Then he
decided to regroup in the safety of the
Rodope Mountains, which turned out to be
fatal because it decreased the number of
possible forces available for the defense of
Adrianople (Edirne). One Russian column
managed to bypass the retreating Ottoman
force and captured Edirne on January 20,
1878, even as the Ottoman peace delegation
was trying to come to terms with their Russian counterparts. After the end of war, he
was court-martialed, stripped off his rank
and medals, and exiled to Baghdad, where
he died in exile in 1892.
zcan
Ahmet O

See also: Bulgarian Horrors, 1876; RussoOttoman War, 18771878; San Stefano,
Treaty of, 1878

Further Reading
I . Halil Sedes. 18771878 Osmanl-Rus ve
Romen Savas. Vol. 3 and Vol. 8. Istanbul:
Askeri Matbaa, 1937, 1940.
Kececizade Izzet Fuad. Kacrlan Frsatlar:
1877 Osmanl-Rus Savas Hakknda Elestiriler ve Askeri Dus unceler, (ed.) Rasim
Suerdem. Ankara: Genelkurmay Basmevi,
1997.
Schem, A. J. An Illustrated History of the Conflict between Russia and Turkey with a
Review of the Eastern Question. New
York: H. S. Goodspeed & Co, 1878.

T
Tepelene, Ali Pasha (17441822)

had arranged a policing network that drew


its agents from the ranks of the bandits
themselves. It required skillful handling to
maintain discipline among this police force
and suppress its ties with relatives who still
remained outlaws. Ali was named a commander in this system in 1787 and performed well in this ambiguous role. During
17931794 and again during 18031804,
he was given the responsibility of routing
out particularly well-entrenched leaders and
assisted in a siege against a powerful clan
of Albanians who were defying the power
of Constantinople. The sultan, in turn,
showed his appreciation for Alis help. In
the 1780s, Ali had received the pashalik of
Trikkala from Sultan Abdulhamid I (1725
1789) and then, through his own wiles and
violence, obtained the pashalik of Janina
(present-day Ioannina, Greece) in 1788.
From this point forward, Ali extended his
authority over ever-increasing numbers of
townships and people, often appointing his
sons, Veli and Mukhtar, to govern them on
his behalf. Alis pashalik and the order
within it were maintained through his own
ruthlessness and cunning. Yet he also
engaged in considerable construction in
both Epirus (present-day northwestern
Greece) and Albania, building roads and
draining marshes. Moreover, the eradication
of bandits in his realm, though sometimes
accomplished with great cruelty, was appreciated by merchants who could engage more
freely in trade on peaceful roads and
increase the wealth of the area (and that of
Ali).

Ali Pasha Tepelene was known as the lion


of Janina for the daring and ruthlessness
with which he extended his control over
much of Albania and Greece during the
early nineteenth century. As the pasha, or
provincial governor, of Janina, he ruled as
an agent of the Ottoman Empire, but he conducted himself as an independent power and
was recognized as such by European heads
of state. He is regarded by Albanians as a
great patriot and nationalist.
Ali was born in 1744 at Tepelene in
southern Albania. His father, Veli, though
poor, was the governor of Tepelene but was
murdered when Ali was 14. His mother,
Khamco, organized a band of brigands to
restore the familys fortunes. An excellent
shot and absolutely fearless, Ali soon
became the leader of these brigands operating in this mountainous area.
At this time, Albania and Greece were
both part of the Ottoman Empire, but the
Ottoman sultan often governed through
loyal local rulers. Once recognized by the
sultan, such men were given the title of
pasha, and the territories assigned to them
were known as pashaliks. Ali continued to
gain experience by performing services for
the pasha of Negroponte and then the pasha
of Delvino, whose daughter he married in
1768.
Banditry was extremely common in the
area, and Ali came to the favorable attention
of the sultan because of his knowledge of the
police system. In the 1760s, the Ottomans

303

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Tepelene, Ali Pasha

Janina remained the center of Alis pashalik and of his court life. Though it retained a
certain wildness, Janina became the foremost center of Greek culture during
this period. Ali himself, though he spoke
Albanian, Greek, and some Turkish, was
illiterate, but he recruited Greek scholars
and founded Greek schools in his capital.
Throughout this period, European travelers
were frequent guests at Alis cultured court,
and he became celebrated for the hospitality
he extended to these people, who often
recorded their impressions in their memoirs.
His most famous visitor was the poet Lord
Byron, who left his memories of the encounter as a canto in Childe Harold. Even the
liberated Greeks would look back on Alis
court with respect.
In addition to entertaining individual
travelers from other parts of Europe, Ali
became a skilled diplomat and manipulated
other European rulers to gain greater leverage with the sultan. He was treated as an independent sovereign by the heads of Britain
and France. His army defeated that of
Emperor Napoleon I at Berat in 1809,
though Napoleon returned two years later
and succeeded in gaining the access to the
Ionian Islands that he had been denied earlier. As the Napoleonic Wars grew in scale,
the potential usefulness of Alis forces were
appreciated by both the Russians and the
British; the latter entered into an official
alliance with Ali in 1814.
More important than his dealings with
Europe, however, was Alis role within the
Ottoman Empire. In the early nineteenth
century, the empire had entered a phase of
decline that was greatly hastened by the
actions of such independent despots as Ali.
For years, a succession of sultans had appreciated the assistance received from Ali and
had let him do much as he wished. By
1810, Alis rule extended to most of the

Peloponnesus, central Greece, western


Macedonia, and southern Albania. Though
he was appointed viceroy of Rumelia (the
Ottoman term for most of the Balkans), the
nineteenth-century sultans became increasingly dissatisfied with Alis independent
spirit and his frequent failure to carry out
orders. As Ali hastened the economic development of his territories, he also infected his
subjects with the desire for independence
from the empire that would lead to more
pronounced Albanian nationalism later in
the century.
In the meantime, many people throughout
Greece were already planning an independence war. Though Ali did not participate
directly in these efforts, his own activities
divided the attention of the sultan. By 1819,
Sultan Mahmud II (17891839) had lost
patience with Ali and was conspiring to be
rid of him. In the following year, when Ali
had one of his own enemies murdered in the
city of Constantinople, the sultan ordered
that he be deposed. When Ali refused to comply, Ottoman troops were sent against him
and remained thus occupied as the Greeks
elsewhere on the peninsula initiated their
independence efforts.
Ali was finally assassinated by the sultans agents on February 5, 1822. After his
death, he was decapitated and his head carried back to Constantinople for display.
Karen Mead
See also: Greek War of Independence, 1821
1832

Further Reading
Faroqhi, Suraiya, et al. Economic and Social
History of the Ottoman Empire. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 1995.
Fleming, K. E. The Muslim Bonaparte: Diplomacy and Orientalism in Ali Pashas
Greece. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University
Press, 1999.

Tito, Josip Broz


Plomer, William Charles Franklyn. Ali the
Lion: Ali of Tebeleni, Pasha of Jannina:
17411822. London: Jonathan Cape, 1970.
Young, Antonia, ed. Albania. Santa Barbara
CA: ABC-CLIO, 1997.

Tito, Josip Broz (18921980)


Yugoslav Communist leader, major figure in
the Yugoslav resistance during World War
II, and leader of Yugoslavia Josip Broz Tito
was born on May 7, 1892, into a peasant
family in the village of Kumrovec in Croatia
on the border with Slovenia (then part of
Austria), Josip Broz was one of 15 children
of a Croat blacksmith and a Slovene mother.
Much of his early life remains obscure. With
little formal education, he became a metalworker and machinist. Active in the SocialDemocratic Party, he was drafted into the
Austro-Hungarian army in 1913. He fought
in World War I and rose to the rank of
sergeant, commanding a platoon in a Croat
regiment before being captured in 1915 on
the Russian Front.
While in the camp, Broz became fluent
in Russian. Released following the
March 1917 Revolution, he made his way
to Petrograd, where he joined the Bolsheviks
but was imprisoned until the Bolsheviks
took power in October 1917. He fought on
the Communist side in the Russian Civil
War but returned to Croatia in 1920 and
helped organize the Yugoslav Communist
Party (YPJ). Rising rapidly in responsibility
and position, he became a member of the
YPJ Politburo and Central Committee. It
was at this time that he took the pseudonym
of Tito to conceal his identity. He was
imprisoned from 1929 to 1934. In 1937,
Stalin appointed Tito to head the YPJ as its
secretary-general. Tito knew little of communist ideology, but Stalin was interested
in loyalty.

Josip Broz Tito, an accomplished guerrilla


leader, led Yugoslavia out of World War II
and reorganized the country to follow his
iron-fisted, communist ruleeven while he
moved the nation away from total Soviet
domination. (Library of Congress)

Following the German invasion of Yugoslavia in April 1941, Tito took command of
the Communist Partisan resistance movement with the twin goals of fighting the
Axis occupiers and then seizing power in
Yugoslavia once the Allies had won. Tito
and the Partisans did not hesitate to attack
German garrisons, sparking retaliation and
the execution of many more innocent
hostages than Germans slain. Titos Partisans
became archrivals of the Serb-dominated
etniks (Chetniks) led by General Draza
C
Mihajlovic (18931946), minister of war
in the Yugoslav government-in-exile in
etniks eschewed the types of
London. The C
attacks undertaken by the Partisans, rightly

305

306

Tito, Josip Broz

fearing German reprisals. In a controversial


decision that had far-reaching repercussions
for the future of Yugoslavia, in 1943, the British government, which headed the Allied
effort to assist the Yugoslav resistance, shifted
all support to the Partisans.
By the end of the war, the Partisans had
grown to a force of 800,000 people and had
in fact liberated most of Yugoslavia themselves, placing Tito in a strong bargaining
position with Stalin. Tito attempted to
annex the southern provinces of Austria,
moving Yugoslav forces into Carinthia, but
was prevented in this design by the timely
arrival of the British V Corps and was convinced to quit Austrian territory in midMay 1945.
Tito extracted vengeance on the Croats,
many of whom had been loyal to the Axis,
as had many Slovenes. Perhaps 100,000
people who had sided with the Axis occupiers were executed by the Partisans without
trial within weeks of the wars end. The
majority of German prisoners taken in the
war also perished in the long March of
Hate across Yugoslavia.
With the support of the Red Army, Tito
formed the National Front and consolidated
his power. Although superficially there
appeared to be a coalition government
in Yugoslavia, Tito dominated. In the
November 1945 elections for a constituent
assembly, the National Front headed by the
Partisans won 96 percent of the vote. The
assembly promptly deposed Peter II (1923
1970) and proclaimed a republic. Yugoslavias new constitution was modeled on that
of the Soviet Union. Tito elaborated the
twin ideas of national self-determination
for Yugoslavias nationalities and a strong,
centralized Communist Party organization
that would be the sole political expression
of each national groups will. Under Tito,
Yugoslavia became a federal republic, a

beneficial change for a country that had


suffered severely from rivalries among its
various peoples. Tito also nationalized the
economy and built it on the Soviet model.
Following the war, Tito had General
Mihajlovic and some other leading Cetniks
put on trial under trumped-up charges of
collaboration with the Germans. Despite
vigorous Western protests, they were
executed in July 1946. Equally destructive
of European goodwill was the sentencing
of Archbishop Aloysius Stepinac (1898
1960) to life imprisonment for his anticommunist role during the war.
For 35 years, Tito held Yugoslavia
together by ruling as a despot. In a departure
from his past record of sharing hardships
with his men, once in power he developed a
taste for a luxurious lifestyle. He muzzled
dissent, but repression and fear of outside
powers, chiefly the Soviet Union, solidified
his rule.
In 1948, Yugoslavia was expelled from
the international Communist movement.
The break sprang in large part from Titos
desire to form under his leadership a Balkan
confederation of Yugoslavia, Albania, and
Bulgaria. There were also differences with
Moscow over Yugoslav support for the
Communist side in the Greek Civil War, as
Moscow lived up to its bargain with Winston
Churchill during the war not to contest
British control in Greece.
The break with Moscow and fears of a
Russian invasion led Tito to build up a
large military establishment. In this he was
assisted by the West, chiefly the United
States. By the time of Titos death in 1980,
the Yugoslav standing army and reserves
totaled 2 million men. To protect his
freedom of movement, Tito also joined
Yugoslavia to the Non-Aligned Movement,
and in the 1960s, he became a leader of this
group along with Gamal Abdel Nasser

Transnistrian War

(19181970) of Egypt and Jawaharlal Nehru


(18891964) of India.
Before the break, Tito was as doctrinaire
as Stalin. After the schism, Tito became
more flexible. He allowed peasants to withdraw from cooperative farms and halted the
compulsory delivery of crops. He decentralized industry by permitting the establishment of workers councils with a say in
running the factories. He permitted citizens
more rights in the courts and limited freedom of speech, and he opened cultural ties
with the West and released Archbishop
Stepinac (although he was not restored to
authority). In 1949, Tito even wrote an
article in the influential American journal
Foreign Affairs titled Different Paths to
Socialism, giving birth to polycentralism.
By 1954, however, reform had ended. Tito
reacted sharply to Milovan Djilass (1911
1995) proposal to establish a more liberal
socialist movement in the country that would
in effect turn Yugoslavia into a two-party
state. Djilass book, The New Class (1957),
charged that a new class of bureaucrats
exploited the masses as much as or more
than their predecessors. Djilas was condemned to prison. Meanwhile, financial
problems multiplied. By the end of the 1970s,
inflation was surging, Yugoslavias foreign
debt was up dramatically, its goods could not
compete in the world marketplace, and there
were dramatic economic differences between
the prosperous north and impoverished south
that threatened to break up the state.
As long as Tito lived, Yugoslavia held
together. In 1974, Tito had set up a complicated collective leadership. The constitution
of that year provided for an association of
equals that helped to minimize the power
of Serbia, diminish Yugoslavias ethnic and
religious hatreds and rivalries, and keep the
lid on nationalism. There was a multiethnic,
eight-man State Presidency representing the

six republics and two autonomous regions.


Each of the six republics had virtual veto
power over federal decision-making. Djilas
claimed that Tito deliberately set things up
so that after his death, no one would ever
possess as much power as he did.
Tito died in Lubljana on May 4, 1980.
With the collapse of the Soviet Union and
Eastern Europe, with the end of the threat of
Soviet invasion, and with the discrediting of
communism, the federal system that Tito had
put together came apart in bloodshed and war.
Spencer C. Tucker
See also: Partisans, Yugoslavia; Trieste
Dispute; Yugoslavia in World War II; YugoslavSoviet Split

Further Reading
Djilas, Milova n. Tito. New York: Harcourt
Brace Jovanovich, 1980.
Pavlowitch, Steven K. Tito, Yugoslavias Great
Dictator: A Reassessment. Columbus: Ohio
State University Press, 1992.
Roberts, Walter R. Tito, Mihailovic, and the
Allies, 19411945. New Brunswick, NJ:
Rutgers University Press, 1973.
West, Richard. Tito and the Rise and Fall of
Yugoslavia. New York: Carroll and Graf,
1994.

Transnistrian War
The Transnistrian War was a conflict on the
northeastern frontier of the Balkans between
the forces of the Republic of Moldova and
the breakaway region of Transnistria. It
lasted from 1990 until a cease-fire on
July 21, 1992. The origins of the war lie in
the collapse of the Soviet Union. The Moldavian Socialist Soviet Republic before
1918 had been the province of Bessarabia
as a part of imperial Russia and then a part
of Greater Romania from 1918 to 1940 and

307

308

Trianon, Treaty of, 1920

again from 1941 to 1944. Soviet authorities


attached a thin strip of land on the east bank
of the Dniester River to the Moldavian SSR.
The Moldavian SSR declared its independence as the Republic of Moldova on
August 27, 1991. This raised concerns in the
largely Russian and Ukrainian populations
living in the area on the east bank of the
Dniester River that the new republic might
seek a union with Romania. Pro-Russian elements proclaimed a Transnistrian Republic
in Tiraspol on September 2, 1990.
Fighting began when Moldovan government forces attempted to cross the Dniester
River into Transnistria to enforce the rule
of the government in Chis on November 2,
1990. These efforts proved unsuccessful.
Fighting intensified in 1992. Transnistrian
forces received aid from Russia and Ukraine
as well as from Cossack organizations. The
Russian armys Fourteenth Army, under the
command of General Alexander Lebed
(19502002), was stationed in Transnistria.
It provided valuable support to the Transnistrian forces. Moldova obtained some military assistance from Romania. After some
heavy fighting along the river, the Russian
government of Boris Yeltsin (19312007)
arranged a cease fire on July 21, 1992; as
of this writing, it remained in effect. Around
1,000 people died in the conflict. The
government of Transnistria has obtained little international recognition beyond Russia.
It is widely accused of engaging in a number
of illegal activities including smuggling and
money laundering.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Bessarabia; Cold War in the Balkans

Further Reading
Herd, Graeme P., and Jennifer D. P. Moroney.
Security Dynamics in the Former Soviet
Bloc. London: Routledge, 2003.

King, Charles. The Moldovans: Romania, Russia and the Politics of Culture. Stanford,
CA: Stanford University Press, 2000.
Panici, Andrei. Romanian Nationalism in
the Republic of Moldova. Global Review
of Ethnopolitics 2 no. 2 (January 2003):
3755.

Trianon, Treaty of, 1920


The Treaty of Trianon between the Allied
powers and Hungary at the end of World
War I confirmed the dismemberment of the
Austro-Hungarian Empire as well as new
frontiers in Central and Eastern Europe.
Although the Paris Peace Conference began
in January 1919, the peace treaty with
Hungary was not signed until mid-1920
because of internal upheaval in Hungary.
On October 16, 1918, the Hungarian
government declared an end to the dual
system of government with Austria, with
only a personal union remaining between
the states. On October 31, Count Miha ly
Karolyis (18751955) bloodless bourgeois
revolution created an independent Hungary, ending the Austro-Hungarian Empire.
Prime Minister Karolyi, aware of demands
for self-determination by the various ethnic
groups, proposed transforming Hungary
into a confederation and creating an
Eastern Switzerland in the Danube region.
Both Britain and the United States supported
the plan, but ethnic groups within Hungary
sought to join the new states of Yugoslavia
and Czechoslovakia, while Romanians in
eastern Hungary wanted to be part of Romania. These aspirations doomed Ka rolyis
plan to preserve the territorial integrity of
Hungary.
On November 3, 1918, Austro-Hungarian
forces had signed an armistice at Padova,
officially ending hostilities with Italy.
Unwilling to accept this arrangement,

Trianon, Treaty of, 1920

French general Louis Franchet dEsperey


(18561942), commander of Allied forces
in the Balkans, forced the Karolyi government on November 13 to sign a military
convention in Belgrade that defined the
demarcation line in southern Hungary. This
document allowed French troops to occupy
part of Transylvania, while portions of
Baranya came under French and Serbian
occupation. The French government, under
pressure from leaders of the new Czechoslovak government abroad, broke the terms of
the Belgrade Convention and authorized
the Czech occupation of Slovakia.
Prime Minister Karolyi continued to base
his foreign policy on the application to Hungary of U.S. president Woodrow Wilsons
(18561924) Fourteen Points. Until February 1918, Wilson supported the conclusion
of a group of experts who opposed the dismemberment of the Austro-Hungarian monarchy as an economic unit. Wilson changed
his mind when he became convinced that
preserving the Dual Monarchy would likely
lead to continued German dominance in the
region. Wilson was also under pressure
from Czech leaders and the British media.
In early 1919, the Allied Supreme War
Council in Paris authorized successor states
to occupy Hungarian territory. Czech,
Romanian, and Serbian (Yugoslav) forces
violated even these arrangements by
advancing beyond the set demarcation
lines. When he learned of the Allied decision, Prime Minister Ka rolyi resigned in
protest on March 20, 1919. The next day,
the Communists came to power in Hungary
and established the Hungarian Soviet
Republic, which then went to war to recover
Slovakia but was in turn defeated by Romanian forces, leading to its collapse.
Only after the departure of the Romanian
army from Budapest and the stabilization
of the political situation under the

conservative rule of Admiral Miklos Horthy


could the Hungarian delegation travel to
Paris in January 1920 to receive the peace
treaty conditions offered by the Allied
powers to Hungary. These arrangements
were draconian. Instead of proposing
democratic and federative changes for
Hungary, the peace treaty created successor
states in the Danube region. Hungary lost
as much as two-thirds of its territory to
these new states. Romania gained Transylvania, part of the Hungarian Plain east of
Oradea, and the eastern Banat. Czechoslovakia secured Slovakia and Carpathian Rus.
The Kingdom of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenians (Yugoslavia) gained Croatia, Slavonia,
the Backa, and the western Banat. Austria
secured Burgenland, already ceded in the
Treaty of Saint-Germain. The only excep denburg, where local
tion was Sopron/O
inhabitants attacked Austrian troops when
they entered the city. Under direction of the
Allied powers, a plebiscite was held in
December 1921 in Sopron and the immediate surrounding area. As a result of the
vote, this small part of the Burgenland
remained part of Hungary. As far as Hungary was concerned, this was the only
instance where the Allies allowed a plebiscite to be held.
Hungary was left essentially an agricultural state of only 8 million people; 3 million
other Hungarians were forced to live under
foreign sovereignty, chiefly those in Transylvania. Hungary was deprived of access
to the sea as well as the majority of its former natural resources. Its army was set at a
maximum of 35,000 men.
The peace treaty signed in the Trianon
Palace in Versailles on June 4, 1920, confirmed these provisions. Blocks of Hungarians living along the frontiers were cut off
from Hungary by this artificial separation.
Virtually the entire population of what

309

310

Trieste Dispute

remained of Hungary regarded the Treaty of


Trianon as manifestly unfair, and agitation
for revision began immediately. Promise of
return of some of its former territories
formed the basis of the subsequent cooperation of Hungary with Adolf Hitlers
Germany.
Anna Boros
See also: Yugoslavia, Axis Occupation Forces
in World War II

Further Reading
Kiraly, Bela B., Peter Pastor, and Ivan Sanders,
eds. Essays on World War I: Total War and
Peacemaking: A Case Study on Trianon.
New York: Social Science Monographs,
Brooklyn College Press, 1982.
Macartney, Carlile Aylmer. Hungary and Her
Successors: The Treaty of Trianon and
Its Consequences, 19191937. London:
Oxford University Press, 1965.
Ormos, Ma ria. From Padua to the Trianon,
19181920. Boulder, CO: Social Science
Monographs, 1990.

Trieste Dispute
Trieste is an Italian city at the northern head
of the Adriatic Sea near the border with
Yugoslavia (now Slovenia and Croatia),
whose sovereignty was hotly contested
between Italy and Yugoslavia. Securing
Trieste from the Austro-Hungarian Empire
was one of the main objectives of Italian
intervention in World War I, which explains
the emotion bound with its name among
many Italians. Mainly surrounded by hills
that have limited its size, Trieste became
important when it was occupied at the end
of World War II by the Yugoslav Partisans,
led by veteran Communist Josip Broz Tito
(18921980). Meanwhile, the British and
Americans pushed the 2nd New Zealand
Armored Division to Trieste to prevent

Yugoslavia from securing full control of the


citys important harbor. Some observers
saw in this development the first sign of the
forthcoming Cold War.
The Yugoslav occupation elicited violence against the majority Italian population
and against non-Communist Slovenians, but
an agreement brokered between the British
and Titos representatives on August 8,
1945, restored at least partial order. The former Italian territory now under Yugoslav
control was divided into two areas by the
Morgan Line. The British and Americans
occupied the western zone, comprising
Trieste Harbor, and the Yugoslavs controlled
the eastern territory, which contained important strategic natural resources such as mercury, bauxite, and coal.
Trieste straddled two worlds: the Eastern
Communist bloc and the Western democratic
bloc. Certainly, the Soviet Union supported
Communist Yugoslavias claims on the
region. For their part, the Allies actually
encouraged Tito in the sense that they assisted
him economically and diplomatically following his 1948 break with the Soviet Union.
The Yugoslavs reinforced their troop
presence in the area, and in 1951, the Italians deployed the first groups of former partisans in a covert stay-behind organization
known as O, which later would be integrated into the Gladio organization under
the control of the Central Intelligence
Agency (CIA) and the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization (NATO).
In the Paris Peace Treaty signed on February 10, 1947, between Italy and the Allies,
Yugoslavia secured the Istrian Peninsula,
forcing some 250,000 Italians to abandon
the area and find refuge in Italy. The Trieste
area was designated a Free Territory under
the administration of the United Nations.
Meanwhile, Yugoslavs killed perhaps
10,000 Italians in the foibe (karstic

Truman Doctrine

sinkholes), which were effective natural


cemeteries.
Because neither Italy nor Yugoslavia
could agree on a governor for Trieste, the
area was divided into area A (from Duino
to Trieste) and area B (Capodistria to
Cittanova). On several occasions, the Italian
population of Trieste protested against the
Allied occupation, resulting in civilian fatalities when British troops overreacted to the
demonstrations. At the same time, Yugoslavia continued to threaten the annexation
of area B.
According to some historians, the Italian
government mounted covert paramilitary
operations in Istria that were designed to
discourage Yugoslavias aspirations and
plans regarding annexation. The Trieste crisis also played an important role in Italian
domestic politics because it fueled Italian
right-wing movements. Several youth
organizations volunteered to mount strong
protests against Tito and the Allied occupation of the city.
Finally, an agreement was signed in London on May 10, 1954, stipulating that Istria
was to be administered by Yugoslavia and
Trieste by Italy, with mutual respect of
minority rights. This led to the AngloAmerican withdrawal of troops from
Trieste, which now passed to Italian sovereignty. On December 10, 1975, Italy and
Yugoslavia signed the Osimo Treaty that
finalized the border permanently with only
a few slight modifications.
The dissolution of Yugoslavia after the
Velvet Revolution of 19891990 did not
change the Trieste situation. In June 1991,
war broke out in the former Yugoslav territories, which led to the end of the Yugoslav
federal state, as Croatia and Slovenia gained
their independence. Both declared that they
would respect the Yugoslav states legacy
and would therefore honor the Osimo

Treaty. Italian foreign minister Emilio


Colombo expressed Italys satisfaction with
this decision.
Alessandro Massignani
See also: Tito, Josip Broz (18921980);
Yugoslav-Soviet Split

Further Reading
Brogi, Alessandro. A Question of Self-Esteem:
The United States and the Cold War
Choices in France and Italy, 19441958.
Westport, CT: Praeger, 2002.
De Leonardis, Massimo. La diplomazia
Atlantica e la soluzione del problema di
Trieste (19521954). [Atlantic Diplomacy
and the Resolution of the Trieste Problem
(19521954).] Naples, Italy: Esi, 1992.
Rabel, Roberto G. Between East and West:
Trieste, the United States and the Cold
War, 19411954. Durham, NC: Duke
University Press, 1988.

Truman Doctrine
On March 12, 1947, President Harry S. Truman (18841972) addressed a joint session
of Congress and solemnly stated: I believe
that it must be the policy of the United
States to support free peoples who are
resisting attempted subjugation by armed
minorities or by outside pressures. I believe
that we must assist free peoples to work
out their own destinies in their own way.
I believe that our help should be primarily
through economic and financial aid which
is essential to economic stability and orderly
political processes. With that, President
Truman committed the United States to
what became known as the containment
doctrine, according to which the United
States would take all necessary measures to
prevent the spread of Communism and of
the Soviet Union and its subjugation of the
free world. The sources of this policy were

311

312

Truman Doctrine

much more humble, and it was originated in


the announcement of Great Britain, in February 1947, that it no longer would be able
to provide the financial support it use to provide to Greece and Turkey. The meaning of
such an act, Washington feared, would be
the fall of these countries under Communist
influence, and mainly Greece, whose proWestern government was fighting at that
time Communist guerillas in the northern
part of the country.
The eastern basin of the Mediterranean,
which included the Near East and Middle
East, was historically under British influence. The area was important to the British
Empire after World War II, but now it gained
additional importance in light of the developing Cold War. Soviet presence in the
Near East or in North Africa could jeopardize the ability of the Western powers to
launch strategic air attacks on the Soviet
Union from bases in the region, in case of a
war. The defense of the region was placed
in the hands of the British, and it relied on
the British military bases in the area, the
biggest of which was in Egypt, and in the
supply of military aid to Greece and Turkey.
British power was declining, however, and
at the same time, Soviet activity aiming to
undermine Western influence in the region
seemed to increase. Such was the Soviet
demand from the Turkish government to
change the rules governing ship movements
through the Dardanelles and to take part,
along with other Black Sea powers, in the
defense of the straits. American interpretation of the Soviet demand was that it
intended to build a base in Turkey, to take
it over, and then to gain control over Greece,
and from there of the Middle East and the
Eastern Mediterranean. The event by itself
was of minor importance in the sense that
the Soviet demand was made in the form of
a diplomatic note and was not supported by

any military action, explicit or implicit. The


problem was, from the American point of
view, that there seemed to be a power vacuum in the region as a result of British weakening. Britain was providing military aid to
Turkey, but the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff
(JCS) thought that, because of its strategic
importance, and in order to increase its ability to meet the Soviet pressure, the United
States should increase its economic and
military aid to Turkey. However, as long as
the British continued to provide the military
assistance, the administration would provide
only economic aid.
The American attitude toward the situation in Turkey was not dissociated with the
situation in Greece, and with the difficulties
Britain was facing in its ability to meet the
growing needs in the part of the Mediterranean. Greece, like Turkey, was considered
as a barrier between the Soviet Union and
the Mediterranean. However, the Greek
government had to deal with armed Communist guerrillas acting in the country. The
struggle in the country was not necessarily
one inspired by the Soviet Union, but it
was the result of a struggle between rigid
right-wingers who sought to restore monarchy while failing to deal with the countrys
grave economic situation, and left-wing
party republicans who were affected by the
economic upheaval. For the United States,
though, the political affiliation of the rebels
was enough to convince it to move against
them. Either with Soviet assistance or not,
the United States would not tolerate the
establishment of a Communist government
in Athens, and the Truman administration
was ready to provide assistance to the
Greek government in its struggle against
the Communists.
The decisive moment came with the
British announcement in February 1947
that they would be unable to continue their

Tsolakoglou, Georgios

support to Greece and Turkey. The dire economic situation of the British made the burden of providing military aid to those
countries too heavy, and the government
announced that the Truman administration
would pull its armed forces from Greece
and stop its aid to Greece and Turkey almost
immediately. It was obvious to the Department of State that with the British inability
to contain the Russians, the United States
should do that. However, when preparing
the draft legislation for providing military
and economic aid to Greece and Turkey,
Undersecretary Dean Acheson (18931971)
found it difficult to justify the assistance
request for Turkey, and it did need funds
for relief or recovery since it had never
been under a direct threat from the Kremlin.
To make things more difficult, conciliatory
messages were coming from Moscow,
reducing the incentive in Congress to take
measures against the Soviet Union. Truman
and his aides, determined to provide Turkey
and Greece military and economic aid,
had to find a way to sell such an aid to
Congress.
In a meeting with the heads of Congress,
Acheson described in dark lights the implications of Soviet dominance of the region
and the worldwide consequences of such
Soviet achievement. In response, the
Republican senator Arthur Vandenberg
(18841951) told Truman that it the
president would present his request to
Congress in that manner, the Senate would
support his request. And so, the request
from a joint session of Congress for
$400 million for aid to Turkey and Greece
was presented in terms of a struggle
between alternate ways of life. It marked
the emergence of the Truman Doctrine,
which meant decision to resist aggressive
communism throughout the world.
David Tal

See also: Cold War in the Balkans; Greek


Civil War

Further Reading
Kuniholm, Bruce R. The Origins of the Cold
War in the Near East. Princeton, NJ:
Princeton University Press, 1980
Leffler, Melvin. Preponderance of Power.
Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press,
1992

Tsolakoglou, Georgios
(18861948)
Georgios Tsolakoglou was a Greek military
officer and collaborationist with the German
occupation. Born in April 1886 in Rentia,
Greece, Tsolakoglou pursued a career in
the Greek military. He participated in the
Balkan Wars, World War I, the Greek
expeditionary force in Ukraine during the
Russian Civil War, and the Asia Minor
Campaign. In World War II he commanded
the Third Army Corps of the Army of
Western Macedonia, which first fought to
repel the Italian invasion of October 1940.
During the Greek counteroffensive, he
seized Korc e in southern Albania on
November 22, 1940.
When the Germans invaded Greece on
April 6, 1941, and captured Thessaloniki
three days later, Tsolakoglous force
was caught between the Italians and the
Germans. Recognizing that his position was
hopeless, he surrendered the entire Greek
army to the German invaders of Greece at
Larissa on April 21, 1941. Because of
German insistence, he surrendered to the
Italians on 23 April. These surrenders
occurred without the sanction of the Greek
government.
On April 29, 1941, the Germans appointed Tsolakoglou to be the prime minister
of the collaborationist government in

313

314

Tudjman, Franjo

Athens. In this respect he was similar to


Henri Pe tain (18561951) in France and
Milan Nedic (18771946) in Serbia. Tsolakoglou proved to be an incompetent ruler
who garnered little popular support. The
poor condition of the Greek economy
caused the Germans to replace him with a
civilian economics expert, Konstantinos
Logothetopoulos (18781961) on December 2, 1942. After the war, a Special Collaborators Court arrested Tsolakoglou, tried
him, and sentenced him to death. Eventually
his sentence was commuted to life imprisonment. He died in prison on May 22, 1948.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Greco-Italian War, 19401941;
Greece in World War II; Nedic, Milan (1877
1946)

Further Reading
Glenny, Misha. The Balkans: Nationalism,
War and the Great Powers, 18041999.
New York: Viking, 1999.
Jelavich, Barbara, History of the Balkans.
Vol. 2, Twentieth Century. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 1983.
Mazower, Mark. Inside Hitlers Greece. New
Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1993.

Tudjman, Franjo (19221999)


Yugoslav military officer and first president
of the Republic of Croatia (19901999),
Franjo Tudjman was born in Veliko, Trgovisce, in the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats, and
Slovenes (now Croatia) on May 14, 1922.
He attended secondary school in Zagreb
and graduated from the Military Academy
in Belgrade in 1957. He served in the Partisan movement during World War II.
Tudjman worked in the Yugoslav Ministry of National Defense during 19451961,
becoming one of the youngest generals in

the Yugoslav army in 1960. He left active


military service the next year and began a
new career as head of the Institute for the
History of the Labor Movement of Croatia
(19611967). During 19631967, he was
also an associate professor of history at
Zagreb University, where he earned a doctorate in political science in 1965.
Tudjman was a member of the Socialist
Republic of Croatias parliament during
19651969. After participating in the
nationalist Croatian Spring movement, he
was imprisoned for two years beginning in
October 1972. He was again imprisoned
during 19811984 for his political activities
aimed at Croatian independence.
In 1989, Tudjman became one of the
founding members of the Croatian
Democratic Union (HDZ). After the HDZ
won the first democratic elections in 1990,
he joined the parliament, which designated
him president of the new Republic of Croatia. In 1991, Tudjman led his country to
full independence from Yugoslavia and in
the subsequent war with Serbia, which
lasted until 1995 and claimed thousands of
lives. His policies emphasizing Croatian
nationalism did little to reassure the Serbian
minority, who constituted around 12 percent
of the population within Croatias borders,
mainly in the Krajina region. When the
country declared independence, the Serbs
attempted to secede. A Serbian government
formed in Knin. Croatian sovereignty was
not restored there until 1995. Nevertheless,
in 1991, he secretly met with Slobodan
Milosevic (19412006) in Karadjordjevo to
discuss a partition of Bosnia between Croatia and Serbian-controlled Yugoslavia.
After the fighting began in Bosnia in 1992,
this plan was abandoned.
After the fall of Vukovar in November 1991, fighting in Croatia died down
until 1995. Tudjman secured military help

Tudjman, Franjo

characterized by both significant human


rights abuses and political repression. In
1995 he signed the Dayton Agreement, but
refused to cooperate with the International
Criminal Tribunal. As president of Croatia,
he refused to distance himself from emigre
Croats with Ustas a connections. He also
embarrassed himself by publishing a book
that questioned the extent of the Holocaust.
Tudjman died on December 10, 1999, in
Zagreb. Tjudman deservedly shares much
of the odium for the breakup of Yugoslavia
with Milosevic.
Lucian N. Leustean
See also: Bosnian War, 19921995; Milosevic, Slobodan (19412006); Vukovar, Siege
of, 1991; Yugoslav Wars, 19911995, Causes;
Yugoslav Wars, 19911995, Consequences
Franjo Tudjman was a Croatian nationalist
who was elected president of Croatia in 1990
and led the republic to independence from
the Serbian-dominated Yugoslav federation.
(Embassy of the Republic of Croatia)

from the United States. During Operation


Storm, his retrained and reequipped forces
expelled much of the Serbian population
from Croatia.
Tudjman was reelected president in direct
elections in 1992 and 1997. His regime was

Further Reading
Goldstein, Ivo. Croatia: A History. Translated
by Nikolina Jovanovic. London: Hurst,
1999.
Rogel, Carole. The Breakup of Yugoslavia and
the War in Bosnia. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1998.
Tanner, Marcus. Croatia: A Nation Forged in
War. New Haven, CT: Yale University
Press, 2001.

315

U
UNPROFOR

Republic of Macedonia. New protected


areas were later established on June 30,
1992, in areas of Croatia controlled by the
JNA, the mission goal being facilitating the
removal of the JNA from Croatia.
On June 8, 1992, the UN Security Council
expanded UNPROFORs mandate to include
security for the Sarajevo Airport in Bosnia
and Herzegovina in response to the increasing violence between Bosniaks (Bosnian
Muslims), Bosnian Croats, and Bosnian
Serbs. UNPROFOR was tasked with securing the safety of humanitarian supplies
being brought into Bosnia. On September 14,
1992, UNPROFORs mandate was expanded again to protecting humanitarian convoys throughout Bosnia, also establishing
infantry battalions throughout Bosnia to
support the mission. Endangered humanitarian relief efforts due to heavy ongoing fighting and ethnic cleansing, notably around the
city of Srebrenica in eastern Bosnia, led to
the UN Security Council on April 16, 1993,
demanding Srebrenica be treated as a safe
area to be demilitarized by all parties,
with UNPROFOR to oversee the demilitarization. On May 6, UNPROFORs mandate
expanded to include additional safe areas,
including Sarajevo, Tuzla, Zepa, Gorazde,
and Bihac . It could use military force in
these places to enforce the demilitarization
against all parties other than the Bosnian
government. Despite some humanitarian
successes, insufficient ground forces and
inconsistent support from air power hampered UNPROFORs ability to carry out the
expanded mandates. UNPROFOR regularly

The United Nations Security Council (Resolution 743-1992) created the United Nations
Protection Force (UNPROFOR) for the former Yugoslavia as a peacekeeping force on
February 21, 1992, and ordered it to deploy
on April 7, 1992 (Resolution 749-1992)
with an operational mandate in five of the
republics of the former Yugoslavia (Croatia,
Bosnia-Herzegovina, Macedonia, Montenegro, and Serbia). UNPROFOR lasted
until March 31, 1995, when the United
Nations restructured its peacekeeping
operations in the regions of the former
Yugoslavia. UNPROFOR consisted of
nearly 39,000 military personnel from
42 countries with supporting staff. The
headquarters was located in Zagreb, Croatia.
The Security Council established the
original mandate to provide monitoring in
protected areas of Croatia of cease-fire
agreements between the government of
Croatia, the Serbian minority in the Krajina
region of Croatia, and the Federal Republic
of Yugoslavia National Army (JNA). This
mandate was mostly consistent with the traditional requirements for UN interventions
into conflict zones: the monitoring of established cease-fire agreements with all parties
to the conflict agreeing to the intervention.
UNPROFOR forces were first deployed
to Croatia in large numbers within three
UN Protected Areas with strong Serbian
ethnic presence: western Slavonia, eastern
Slavonia, and the Krajina region. Observers
also went to the Former Yugoslavian

316

Ustasa

faced deliberate attacks from all parties in


the conflict, failed to prevent attacks on the
Bosnian safe areas (usually by Bosnian
Serb forces), failed to prevent ethnic cleansing atrocities, and regularly failed to influence the parties to honor the many broken
cease-fire agreements.
UNPROFOR represented a shift in policy
by the United Nations after the end of the
Cold War. The postCold War missions
became increasingly multilateral, showed a
willingness by the Security Council to
engage in coercive peace enforcement, and
were openly concerned with humanitarian
goals. The original peacekeeping mission
of UNPROFOR was approved by all
involved governments but not all parties
to the conflict, remaining consistent with
Cold Warera interventions. That mission
expanded to a mandate of peace enforcement and vague directives to protect safe
areas, to enforce demilitarization, and to
protect humanitarian convoys throughout
an active conflict zone. The capabilities and
procedures developed by the United Nations
throughout the Cold War were inadequate
to the missions assigned to UNPROFOR.
Although achieving some significant
humanitarian successes such as maintaining
the Sarajevo airport, the inadequacy combined with failures in Somalia and Rwanda
during the 1990s forced the United Nations
to examine its policies and procedures
regarding intervention.
Brian G. Smith
See also: Sarajevo, Siege of, 19921995;
Yugoslav Wars, 19911995; Yugoslav Wars,
19911995, Consequences

Further Reading
Burg, Steven L., and Paul S. Shoup. The War in
Bosnia-Herzegovina: Ethnic Conflict and
International Intervention. London: M. E.
Sharpe, 2000.

Doyle, Michael, and Nicholas Sambanis.


Making War and Building Peace: United
Nations Peace Operations. Princeton, NJ:
Princeton University Press, 2006.
Weiss, Thomas, and Don Hubert. The Responsibility to Protect: Research, Bibliography,
Background. Ottawa: International Development Research Centre, 2001.

Ustasa
The Ustas a (literally, rebels) was an
extreme right-wing Croat nationalist movement that fought for the secession of Croatia
from Yugoslavia prior to and during
World War II. Following the collapse of
the Austro-Hungarian Empire in 1918, the
Croat nationalists were disappointed to see
their dreams of an independent Croatia
crushed with the establishment of a
new multiethnic state, the Kingdom of
Yugoslavia. Croat radical nationalism eventually expressed itself in the creation of the
Ustasa, which employed terrorist means in
order to achieve its nationalist ambitions of
an independent state.The start of World
War II provided the Ustasa with an opportunity to try to establish an independent
Croatia. In 1941, the Ustasa came to power
with the support of Nazi Germany and
Fascist Italy and formed a fascist puppet
state in Croatia. Governed by Ante Pavelic
(18891959), Croatia incorporated Bosnia
and Herzegovina and had a significant Serb
population. The Ustas a pursued a policy
of ethnic cleansing against Jews, Roma,
Muslims, and Serbs in territories under its
control. It established a network of concentration camps, the largest of which was
Jasenovac (about 60 miles south of the
Croatian capital of Zagreb) that became as
notorious in the Balkans as Auschwitz was
in Nazi-occupied Poland. Implemented
with merciless brutality, the Ustas as

317

318

Ustasa

extermination policies were responsible for


the deaths of more than 500,000 Serbs,
20,000 Roma, most of the countrys Jews,
and untold thousands of political opponents.
Well over 150,000 Serbs fled or were
deported from Croatia, and as many as
200,000 Orthodox Christian Serbs were
forced, often at gunpoint, to convert to
Roman Catholicism.
Yugoslavian resistance to the Germans
and their supporters, the Croatian Ustas a
and Serbian general Milan Nedics (1877
1946) government, centered on two factions.
Colonel Dragoljub Draz a Mihajlovic
(18931946), who strongly supported restoration of the monarchy, set up the Cetniks
(named for Serb guerrillas who had fought
the Turks); while Josip Broz Tito (1892
1980), leader of the Yugoslav Communist
Party since 1937, headed the second resistance group, the Partisans, which were particularly active in Montenegro, Serbia, and
Bosnia. After failing to develop a cooperative approach against the Germans
and Ustas a, Tito and Mihajlovic turned
against each other. Ultimately, the Partisans
gained an upper hand, and by the end of the
war, their numbers swelled to over half a
million men.

After the war, Tito Partisans exacted vengeance on their opponents, including the
Ustas a and C etniks. Within weeks of the
wars end, the Partisans had executed without trial up to a quarter of a million people
who had sided with the Germans, most of
them Croats. However, many of the Ustasa
leaders were able to flee to safety in South
America. Pavelic himself fled to Argentina,
where he reorganized the Ustas a in exile.
He was, however, wounded in an assassination attempt in Madrid in 1957, and died
two years later from his injuries.
Alexander Mikaberidze
See also: Croatian War; Tito, Josip Broz
(18921980)

Further Reading
Munoz, Antonio J. For Croatia and Christ:
The Croatian Army in World War II, 1941
1945. Bayside, NY: Europa Books, 2004.
Ramet, Sabrina P. The Three Yugoslavias:
State-Building and Legitimation, 1918
2005. Bloomington: Indiana University
Press, 2006.
Zimmermann, Warren. Origins of a Catastrophe: Yugoslavia and its Destroyers. New
York: Times Books, 1996.

V
Vance-Owen Plan, 1993

nor what in their eyes involved ethnic


manipulation; but they eventually accepted it
under international pressure, with the expectation that the Serbs would not agree to it in
any case. This left the Serbian government in
Belgrade to be persuaded to put pressure
upon the Bosnian Serbs to accept. Serbian
president Slobodan Milosevic (19412006)
was himself under pressure from a new
round of proposed international economic
sanctions, but he was prepared to put the
plan to the Bosnian Serbs in return for certain
clarifying assurances. These assurances
related to (1) the potentially Croat-controlled
Posavina Corridor that linked the Serbs of
Banja Luka and the northwest with Serbia
proper; (2) the control of territories already
taken and Serbianized by the Bosnian
Serbs but that would now be returned to
Croat/Muslim administration; and (3) the
question of whether the collective presidency
proposed under the Vance-Owen Plan would
operate on the basis of majority voting or consensus. Having been assured of the role of the
UN forces in relation to the first two points
and of the principle of consensus (which
could effectively imply a veto) in relation to
the last, Milosevic felt able to sell the plan to
the Bosnian Serbs as one that they could
manipulate toward the formation of a unified
Serb state on Bosnian territory. After
protracted pressure, Bosnian Serb leader
Radovan Karadzic (1945) was persuaded in
an environment of ultimatum at Athens on
May 2, 1993, to agree to the plan, with his
proviso that it be ratified by the Bosnian
Serb parliament in Pale.

The Vance-Owen peace plan was devised by


Cyrus Vance (19172002), the United
Nations (UN) peace envoy, and Lord David
Owen (1938), the European Union (EU)
mediator. It was presented in January 1993,
some nine months after the start of the conflict in Bosnia. The plan was guided by a
desire to preserve Bosnia and Herzegovina
as a multiethnic unitary state by formalizing
the internal distribution of territories on the
basis of ethnicity with regard to both the
geographical and the historical contexts.
This goal was to be achieved by instituting 10 provinces (usually referred to as
cantons), each with substantially devolved
powers. This geographical solution could
hardly be described as neat, given the historically diverse and intermingled distribution
of the three communitiesSerb, Croat, and
Muslim. Three of these provinces were to
be mainly Muslim, three mainly Serb, and
two mainly Croat; in the center-west it
proved difficult to characterize the proposed
10th province as other than mixed MuslimCroat, and in the case of Sarajevo itself
(province 7), all three of the ethnic groups
were to share power. Sarajevo was also
to be the seat of a weakened central
government for Bosnia-Herzegovina.
Of the parties to be convinced, only the
Croats could accept the cartography with
readiness, as it offered them scarcely less
than their highest expectation. The mainly
Muslim Bosnian government could support
neither a diminution of their central powers

319

320

Vaphiadis, Markos

This was the closest that the Vance-Owen


Plan came to fruition. Cyrus Vance himself
felt able at this point to effect his previous indication that he would retire, and David Owen
affirmed his faith in Milosevic to prevail at
Pale; in fact, however, the Bosnian Serb
parliament voted by almost 5 to 1 in favor of
a referendum, and the plan was effectively
dead, as a referendum would undoubtedly
have resulted in the plans rejection.
Owen himself was later to complain of
the change in, and lack of, support that he
received from the new administration of the
United States. The Vance-Owen Plan had
been well intended in the context of a search
for a multiethnic solution, but the price of
failure was bound to be high in leaving a
potentially worse situation than had previously been in place; the plan had now firmly
implanted on all sides the notion of territoriality and preemptive gain. Furthermore, if
only temporarily, it reopened the conflict
between Croats and Muslims and undermined the influence that the Belgrade
government had hitherto held over the
Bosnian Serbs. A plan designed for peace
had (unintentionally) escalated the war.
John J. Horton
See also: Bosnian War, 19921995; Dayton
Peace Accords, 1995; Kosovo War, 1998
1999; NATO in the Balkans; Srebrenica
Massacre, 1995; Vance-Owen Plan, 1993;
Yugoslav Wars, 19911995; Yugoslav Wars,
19911995, Causes; Yugoslav Wars, 1991
1995, Consequences

Further Reading
Friedman, Francine. The Bosnian Muslims:
Denial of a Nation. Boulder, CO: Westview
Press, 1996.
Woodward, Susan L. Balkan Tragedy: Chaos
and Dissolution after the Cold War. Washington, DC: Brookings Institution, 1995.

Vaphiadis, Markos (19061992)


Markos Vaphiadis was a leader of the Communist insurgents during the Greek Civil
War, 19451949. He was born into a Greek
community in Ezurum in Ottoman Anatolia.
His family came to Greece in 1922 as a part
of the population exchange between Greece
and Turkey. While living in Thessaloniki,
he became involved in Communist activities. These brought him various periods of
imprisonment and internal exile during the
interwar period.
After the German and Italian occupation
of Greece, Vaphiadis became a leader in
the Communist resistance movement, the
Greek Peoples Liberation Army (ELAS).
He was active in Macedonia. After the
German withdrawal in the fall of 1944, Macedonia became his power base. During the
Greek Civil War, he led military efforts of
the Communist Party in the Democratic
Army of Greece (DSE). He received shelter
and supplies from Titos Yugoslavia.
Disagreement over tactics led to his
ouster in 1948. Vaphiadis wanted to continue fighting with guerilla tactics while the
rest of the Communist leadership advocated
a direct military confrontation with the
American-supported Royalist forces by
establishing an area of direct control in
northern Greece. Vaphiadis also faced accusations of Titoism after the Yugoslav-Soviet
split of 1948.
Soon after the Yugoslav-Soviet split, Tito
ended his support from the DSE. This
ended in defeat for the Communists. Vaphiadis also faced accusations of Titoism after
the split. He went into exile in Moscow in
1950. He later returned to Greece and died
in Athens on February 23, 1992.
Richard C. Hall

Venizelos, Eleutherios
See also: Cold War in the Balkans; Greek
Civil War; Tito, Josip Broz (18921980);
Yugoslav-Soviet Split

Further Reading
Glenny, Mischa. The Balkans: Nationalism,
War and the Great Powers, 18041999.
New York: Viking, 2000.
Jelavich, Barbara. History of the Balkans.
Vol. 2, Twentieth Century. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 1983.
Tarnstrom, Ronald. Balkan Battles. Lindsbrog,
KS: Trogen, 1998.

Venizelos, Eleutherios
(18641936)
Greek political leader and premier Eleutherios Kyriakos Venize los was born on
August 23, 1864, at Mournies, Crete. He
studied law at Athens and returned to practice in Crete. Elected to the Cretan Chamber
of Deputies, he was active in the Cretan
revolt against the Turks during 18961897
and in the movement to unite Crete with
mainland Greece. In 1909, Venizelos went
to Athens to advise the reformist Military
League and instantly became a popular
political figure. As leader of the new Liberal
Party, Venizelos became premier of Greece
for the first time in October 1910. Although
republican in his sentiments, he advocated
a moderate approach in dealing with the
Greek monarchy. Venize los instituted
numerous reforms and successfully guided
Greece through the Balkan Wars of 1912
1913, winning substantial gains in territory
and population.
With the outbreak of World War I, the
Greek government was divided. Venizelos
strongly favored the Allied side, but King
Constantine I and the Greek army high command were pro-German and insisted on a
policy of neutrality. The resulting conflict

Eleutherios Venizelos was prime minister of


Greece sporadically throughout the first three
decades of the twentieth century. The prime
minister and King Constantine I disagreed over
wartime allegiances, prompting Venizelos,
backed by France and Britain, to force the king
into exile in 1917. Venizelos proceeded to lend
the support of the Greek Army to the Allied
Powers in World War I. (Library of Congress)

between king and prime minister brought


on a national constitutional crisis, the
so-called National Schism. Despite royal
opposition, Venize los attempted to cooperate with the Allies. In March 1915, he
offered to send Greek troops to aid the Allies
in the Dardanelles. The offer was rescinded
unconstitutionally by the king, and Venizelos
resigned.
Venize los returned as premier in
August 1915. In September, he mobilized
the Greek army and invited the Allies to
establish a base at Salonika for the support
of Serbia. As a result, he was forced from
office by the king on October 5, 1915, the

321

322

Vienna Award, Second

day that British and French forces landed at


Salonika. Venize los subsequently fled to
Crete on September 25, 1916, and went on
to Salonika where, on October 9, he established a revolutionary provisional government
that provided some 23,000 Greek troops to
fight alongside the Allies on the Salonika
Front. Under heavy pressure from the Allies,
King Constantine (18681923) was forced to
abdicate and went into exile on January 12,
1917, leaving the crown to his son, Prince
Alexander (18931920). On June 27, 1917,
the Greek government, once again led by
Venize los, formally declared war on the
Central Powers.
Venizelos represented Greece effectively
at the Paris Peace Conference after World
War I, but he was defeated in the November 1920 elections. King Constantine I
returned to the throne in December 1920 but
was forced to abdicate a second time after
Greece lost the Greco-Turkish War of 1921
1922. Venizelos represented Greece at the
Lausanne Peace Conference (19221923)
and became prime minister again for a short
time in 1924. He began a final term as prime
minister in May 1928, but growing royalist
opposition and the worldwide depression
forced him to resign in September 1932.
Venizeloss reputation as a statesman suffered
from his involvement in antiroyalist coup
attempts in 1933 and 1935, and he was forced
into exile in Paris, where he died on
March 18, 1936.
Charles R. Shrader
See also: Greco-Turkish War, 19191922;
Greece in the Balkan Wars; Greece in World
War I; Greek Military Coup, 1909; National
Schism (Greece), 19161917

Further Reading
Alastos, Doros. Venizelos: Patriot, Statesman,
Revolutionary. Gulf Breeze, FL: Academic
International Press, 1978.

Leon, George. Greece and the Great Powers,


19141917. Thessaloniki: Institute for
Balkan Studies, 1974.
Leontaritis, George B. Greece and the First
World War: From Neutrality to Intervention, 19171918. New York: Columbia University Press, 1940.
Prevelakis, Pandelis. The Cretan. Translated
by Peter Mackridge and Abbot Rick.
Minneapolis, MN: Nostos, 1991.

Vienna Award, Second


The Second Vienna Award was an arbitration of a major land dispute during World
War II between Hungary and Romania
caused by Hungary demanding the return
of the region of Transylvania, which it had
lost in the Treaty of Trianon (June 4, 1920)
after World War I. Germany and Italy
arbitrated the dispute and announced
on August 30, 1940, that approximately
40 percent of the disputed parts of Transylvania (43,104 square kilometers out of a
total disputed 103,093 square kilometers,
including the major cities of Cluj, Oradea,
and Targu-Mures) would be transferred to
Hungary from Romania.
The primary foreign policy goal of the
Kingdom of Hungary between World War I
and World War II was reversing the land
and population lost due to the Treaty of
Trianon. Hungarys close ties with Italy
and Germany were rewarded with the
First Vienna Award on November 2, 1938,
which transferred southern regions of
Slovakia to Hungary. Hungary began pressing for the transfer of much of Transylvania
from Romania to Hungary in the summer
of 1940, particularly focusing on contiguous
land connecting Hungary to pockets of people who were ethnically Hungarian and
the ethnically Szekler region. The Szeklers
are a Transylvanian ethnicity sometimes

Vienna Award, Second

considered synonymous with Hungarian.


Ethnic identities and relative population
sizes in the Transylvania region were disputed at the time and remain so in the
twenty-first century. Romania expressed the
desire to begin any negotiations to resolve
the irredentist issues with population
exchanges as the possible solution, forcing
populations to move but with little land to
be transferred.
After the Soviet Union successfully pressured Romania into giving up Bessarabia
and Northern Bukovina on June 27, 1940,
the government of Hungary decided the
time was right to press its territorial claims.
By late June and early July, Hungary and
Romania were mobilizing and redeploying
military forces along their border and Hungary was seeking commitments of military
supplies from Italy. During July, Germany
repeatedly applied strong diplomatic pressure on Romania to make territorial concessions to both Hungary and Bulgaria.
Germany expressed to Romania that its
interests in the Balkans were stability and
economic trade, but that the postWorld
War I territorial changes when Romania
had aligned itself against Germany needed
to be undone. Germany was also concerned
that a Romanian-Hungarian war would lead
to a Soviet intervention designed to seize
the Ploesti oil fields from Romania. Direct
negotiations from August 16, 1940, to
August 24 in Turnu-Severin in Romania
failed to resolve the dispute between
Romania and Hungary.
With negotiations appearing to be leading
nowhere, the Hungarian military began
issuing orders on August 23 preparing for
an invasion of Romania on August 28. The
Hungarian Third Army was mobilized and
joined the Hungarian First and Second
Armies on the border of Romania. The
Romanians deployed 20 divisions in

Transylvania, mostly along the border with


Hungary. At the same time, the Romanian
government was simultaneously concerned
about intervention from the Soviet Union if
Hungary invaded. On August 26, Germany
began military redeployments designed to
seize the Ploesti oil fields if the Soviet
Union invaded Romania as a response to a
Hungarian-Romanian war. On August 26
and 27, Germany made arrangements with
the governments of Hungary and Romania
to diplomatically intervene in the dispute at
a meeting in Vienna. On August 29, German
minister for foreign affairs Joachim von
Ribbentrop (18931946) and Italian minister for foreign affairs Count Galeazzo
Ciano (19031944) met separately with the
delegations from Romania and Hungary,
which included the Romanian minister for
foreign affairs Mihail Manoilescu (1891
1950), the Hungarian minister for foreign
affairs Count Istva n Csa ky (18941941),
and Hungarian prime minister Pa l Teleki
(18791941).
The Romanian and Hungarian delegations
had expected a negotiation, but instead were
presented with an ultimatum by Ribbentrop
and Ciano that they unconditionally accept
an arbitration of the dispute. Germany had
already decided, based on Hitlers territorial
decisions for resolving the border changes on
August 27 at Berchtesgaden, on the results of
the German-Italian arbitration. On the afternoon of August 30 in the Belvedere Palace,
the Second Vienna Award was announced,
transferring about 43,000 kilometers of Transylvania to Hungary and allowing residents
of Transylvania six months within which to
decide which citizenship they desired.
The Hungarian military occupied
northern Transylvania on August 31, 1940.
The loss of territory to the Soviet Union,
Bulgaria, and finally the large region from
Transylvania led to the collapse of the

323

324

Vladimirescu, Tudor

Romanian government on September 6,


1940. Ion Antonescu (18821946) became
prime minister, and King Carol II (1893
1953) abdicated in favor of his young son
Michael (1921). Although Hungary and
Romania both joined the Axis powers, the
two countries remained hostile toward one
another during World War II. Ethnic violence and civic disruption was widespread
throughout Transylvania during the period,
Hungary viewed the transfer of land as
incomplete, and Romanian nationalism
erupted causing a reversal of territorial
losses to be the central foreign policy goal
of the country. Romania declared the award
invalid in diplomatic messages to Italy and
Germany on September 15, 1941, and the
award was voided on September 12, 1944,
by the Allied governments and the original
borders restored by the 1947 Treaty of Paris.
Brian G. Smith
See also: Antonescu, Ion (18821946); Carol
II, King of Romania (18931953); Michael I,
King of Romania (1921); Romania in World
War II

Further Reading
Balogh, Beni. The Second Vienna Award and
the Hungarian-Romanian Relations, 1940
1944. Highland Lakes, NJ: Atlantic
Research and Publications, 2011.
Case, Holly. Between States: The Transylvanian Question and the European Idea
during World War II. Stanford, CA:
Stanford University Press, 2009.
Jelavich, Barbara. History of the Balkans.
Vol. 2, Twentieth Century. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 1983.

Vladimirescu, Tudor (17801821)


Tudor Vladimirescu was a Romanian revolutionary leader. He was born on June 7, 1780
in Vladimir, Otenia, Wallachia, then under

Ottoman suzerainty. He came from a family


of well-off peasants. In 1806, he joined
the Russian army and participated in the
Russo-Ottoman War of 18061812. Here he
gained valuable military training. During
some of this time he commanded local
Wallachian troops called Pandurs.
Vladimirescus role in the events of 1821
in Wallachia was conflicted. He issued a
proclamation on February 4 calling for the
election of native ruler but assuring the
Ottoman authorities of his loyalty. This set
off a peasant uprising largely directed
initially against the Greek (Phanariot) landowners and their supporters. Soon thereafter,
Alexander Ypsilantis (17921828) invaded
Ottoman-controlled Moldavia from Russia
with the intention of provoking an antiOttoman uprising among the Phanariots
and ultimately among the Greeks.
The goals of Vladimirescu and Ypsilantis
were ultimately incompatible. Both forces
converged on Bucharest. In the face of an
expected Ottoman invasion, the two leaders
made some efforts to cooperate, but achieved
little. Both withdrew from Bucharest when
Ottoman troops appeared in Wallachia in
May. Vladimirescu remained in contact with
the Ottomans. Ypsilantis lured him into a
trap, and executed him at Ta rgovis te on
June 7, 1821. Vladimirescus mainly peasant
forces disbanded soon thereafter.
Despite his limitations, Vladimirescu
often receives credit as an early champion
of armed Romanian nationalism. During
the Spanish Civil War of 19361939, a unit
of Romanian volunteers fighting in the
International Brigades bore his name.
During World War II, the Soviets named a
division of Romanian prisoners of war fighting for the Red Army after him. They used
this organization as a means to subvert the
Romanian forces still loyal to the Axis.
Richard C. Hall

VMRO
See also: Greek War of Independence, 1821
1832; Russo-Ottoman War, 18061812;
Ypsilantis, Alexander

Further Reading
Jelavich, Barbara. History of the Balkans.
Vol. 1, Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries. Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 1983.
Stavrianos, L. S. The Balkans since 1453. New
York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1958.

VMRO
VMRO, Vutreshna Makedonska Revolyutsionna Organizatsiya, in English, Internal
Macedonian Revolutionary Organization
(IMRO), which was founded in Salonika in
1893 to promote Macedonian independence
from the Ottoman Empire and exists at
the present time as a political movement in
the independent state of Macedonia. The
founders of VMRO wanted to promote
revolutionary activity directed at Ottoman
authority. Whether they sought affiliation
with Bulgaria or wanted some kind of
autonomy, however, remains unclear. Most
of them were affiliated with the Bulgarian
high school in Salonika and acknowledged
some kind of Bulgarian identity. They also
seem to have wanted to promote unrest in
the Ottoman vilayet (province) of Adrianople (Thrace).
Revolutionary activity began several
years after the founding of the organization.
VMRO groups known as chetas began to
engage in attacks on Ottoman officials in
Macedonia and to fight with Greek- and
Serbian-sponsored bands. Finding the
VMRO to be resistant to direction, the Bulgarian government in Sofia established its own
organization, the Macedonian Supreme Committee, known as Supremists. This organization had close ties to the Bulgarian military.

The Supremists became intertwined to some


degree with VMRO.
In 1903, members of VMRO undertook a
campaign directed against Ottoman rule in
Macedonia. This was known as the Ilinden
(St. Elijahs Day, August 19) uprising.
Earlier that summer, the onset of the uprising, the leader of VMRO, Gotse Delchev
(18721903) was killed. Nevertheless the
uprising, which began on August 2, initially
succeeded in ousting the Ottomans in
much of Macedonia and establishing an
administration in the town of Krushevo. At
the same time, other VMRO elements acted
in the Adrianople vilayet to set up the
Stradzha Republic. Neither of these formations was able to withstand Ottoman counterattacks. By the end of August, Ottoman
control resumed at the cost of almost 5,000
lives, the destruction of many homes and
villages, and 30,000 refugees.
The failure of the Ilinden Uprising forced
the members of VMRO to regroup. Most of
them cooperated with the Bulgarian military
during the Balkan Wars of 19121913. They
undertook missions behind Ottoman lines.
During the First Balkan War, Ottoman civilians accused VMRO bands of atrocities.
During the Second Balkan War, Greek and
Serbian civilians made similar accusations.
The division sanctioned by the Treaty of
Bucharest of 1913 of most of Macedonia
between Greece and Serbia and the flight
of thousands of Macedonian refugees to
Bulgaria strengthened the position of
VMRO within Bulgaria. VMRO bands operated with Bulgarian support in Greek and
Serbian Macedonia after the Treaty of
Bucharest. During World War I, VMRO
bands cooperated with the Bulgarian army.
With the sanction of the Sofia government,
they established authority in parts of Serbian
Macedonia and carried out occupation
duties in Serbia itself. In 1917, VMRO

325

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VMRO

bands participated in defeating the Toplica


rebellion in Serbia.
After Bulgarias defeat in World War I
and loss of Macedonia, VMRO reverted to
its prewar activities of sending armed bands
into Greek and Yugoslav (Serbian) Macedonia to commit acts of terror. By this time, the
hopes of gaining Thrace were more or less
abandoned. During this time, VMRO played
an important role in Bulgarian politics. In
June 1923, VMRO elements participated in
the overthrow and murder of the Bulgarian
peasant party leader Aleksandur Stamboliski (18791923). At the same time
VMRO assumed control of southwestern
Bulgaria (Pirin Macedonia).
Factionalism within the organization
resulted in the assassination of a number of
VMRO leaders, including Todor Alexandrov
(18811924), and the assumption of authority of Ivan Mihailov (18961990). Lawlessness and drug trafficking became pervasive
in VMRO-controlled southwestern Bulgaria.
Mihailov steered VMRO to the right
in European politics. He established contacts with the Croatian Ustasa and cooperated in the assassination of Yugoslav king
Alexander (18881934) in Marseilles. That
same year, a coup in Sofia brought to
power a group of civilian and military
figures who were determined stabilize the
Bulgarian government and to end VMROs
rule in southwestern Bulgaria. The Bulgarian army reestablished control of the central
government and caused many VMRO operatives to flee abroad.
The German and Italian invasion of Yugoslavia and Greece in the spring of 1941
brought about the Bulgarian occupation of
most of Macedonia. At that time, many
VMRO adherents supported the return of
Bulgarian rule to Macedonia. The German
defeat in Soviet Russia and the appearance
in the late summer of 1944 of the Red

Army in Romania and Bulgaria signaled


the end of German hegemony in the Balkans
and the end of Bulgarian rule in Macedonia.
Understanding that the war was lost, Mihailov refused a German offer at this late date
to establish an independent Macedonia.
After World War II, the Communist
regimes in Bulgaria and in the Federal
Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, as well
as the royalist government in Greece, all
viewed VMRO in a negative context. Gradually the FYR of Macedonia acknowledged
early VMRO activities as leading to the
development of a Macedonian identity
and state. During much of the Cold War,
Skoplje and Sofia argued over the Macedonian or Bulgarian identity of VMRO, and
the meaning of its preWorld War I actions.
Both sides agreed that the postWorld War
I VMRO had moved towards fascism.
The end of Communist rule in southeastern Europe brought about the revival of
VMRO in both Bulgaria and Macedonia.
In Bulgaria, the modern VMRO presents
itself as a cultural organization and advocates union with Macedonia. In Macedonia,
a new political party assumed the name
VMRO in 1990. It has adopted a proEuropean policy.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Balkan Wars, 19121913, Origins;
Ilinden Uprising, 1903; Mihailov, Ivan
(18961990); Military League (Bulgaria)

Further Reading
Crampton, R. J. Bulgaria. Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 2007.
Mihailov, Ivan. Spomeni. 4 vols. Brussels:
Macedonian Cultural Fellowship, 1958
1973.
Perry, Duncan. The Politics of Terror: The
Macedonian Revolutionary Movements,
18931903. Durham, NC: Duke University
Press, 1988.

Vukovar, Siege of, 1991


Tomasevich, Jozo. War and Revolution in
Yugoslavia, 19411945. Stanford, CA:
Stanford University Press, 2001.

Vukovar, Siege of, 1991


The siege of Vukovar was one of the first
major battles in the Yugoslav Wars of
19911995. This Serbian-Croatian battle in
this eastern-border Croatian city on the
Danube lasted from May 1991 until Croatian
forces surrendered on November 18, 1991.
Serbian forces operating as the Yugoslav
Peoples Army (JNA) under the command
of General Z ivota Panic (19332003) as
well as Serbian militia forces made three
unsuccessful attempts to capture this heavily
fortified city between approximately September 14 and 25, between September 30 and
October 27, and between October 29 and
November 18 before finally capturing
Vukovar. Croat forces, under the command
of General Mile Dedakovic (1951) were
heavily outnumbered. Nevertheless, casualties were heavy on both sides, with the
Croatians suffering nearly 1,500 military
casualties, 1,131 civilian fatalities and
2,600 missing civilians, and the Serbians losing 1,180 men. After the fall of the city, Serbian militia units cooperating with the JNA
committed war crimes. The most notorious
of these was the massacre of 264 patients at
the Vukovar hospital.
The capture of Vukovar proved to be a pyrrhic victory for the Serbians. Along with their
high casualties, it forced them to reduce their

political and military expectations to more


realistic levels. Despite their military losses,
the Croatians relatively effective defense of
Vukovar strengthened their political will and
gave them the time to create a military force
capable of defending their country against
Serbian aggression. Vukovar also demonstrated Serbian military vulnerabilities and
operational deficiencies in areas such as
urban operations, degraded Serbias will to
continue fighting the Croatians, and gained
greater international support and sympathy
for the Croatians.
The largely ruined city remained in
Serbian hands long after the end of the fighting. Only in 1998 did the Serbs return it to
Croatian control.
Bert Chapman
See also: Croat War, 19911995; Yugoslav
Wars, 19911995

Further Reading
Cigar, Norman. War Termination and
Croatias War of Independence: Deciding
When to Stop. Journal of Croatian Studies
32 (November 1991): 11131.
Sebetovsky, Mario. The Battle of Vukovar:
The Military Battle That Saved Croatia.
Master of Military Studies thesis. Quantico,
VA: Marine Corps University, 2002. http://
handle.dtic.mil/100.2/ADA407751.
U.S. Central Intelligence Agency. Balkan
Battlegrounds: A Military History of the
Yugoslav Conflict, 19901995. 2 vols.
Washington, DC: Central Intelligence
Agency, 20022003.

327

W
Warsaw Pact

established, consisting of the member states


party leaders. The PCC met almost annually
in one of the capitals of the Warsaw Pact
states. On the military side, a Unified Command and a Joint Staff were created to
organize the actual defense of the Warsaw
Treaty states. Marshal Ivan G. Konev
(18971973) was appointed as the first
supreme commander of the Warsaw Pacts
Joint Armed Forces.
In the early years, the Warsaw Pact served
primarily as a Soviet propaganda tool in
East-West diplomacy. Khrushchev used the
PCC to publicize his disarmament, disengagement, and peace offensives and to
accord to them a multilateral umbrella. The
first concrete military step was the admission of the East German army into the
Unified Command, but only the 19581961
Berlin Crisis led to a systematic militarization of the Warsaw Pact. The Soviet general
staff and the Warsaw Pact Unified Command prepared Eastern European armies
for a possible military conflict in Central
Europe. In 1961, the Soviets replaced the
defensive strategy of Josef Stalin with an
offensive strategy providing for a deep
thrust into Western Europe. In the early
1960s, the Warsaw Pact began to conduct
joint military exercises to prepare for fighting a nuclear war in Europe. The new strategy remained in place until 1987, and the
militarization of the Warsaw Pact even
accelerated in the years of Leonid Brezhnev
(19061982).
Behind a facade of unity, growing differences existed within the Eastern alliance.

With the multilateral Treaty of Friendship,


Cooperation, and Mutual Assistance, signed
on May 14, 1955, in Warsaw, the Soviet
Union institutionalized its East European
alliance system. The Warsaw Treaty was
identical to bilateral treaties concluded
from 1945 to 1949 between the Soviet
Union and its East European satellite states
to assure Moscow continued military presence on their territory. The Soviet Union,
Albania, Bulgaria, Romania, East Germany,
Hungary, Poland, and Czechoslovakia
pledged to defend each other if one or more
of the members were attacked.
The Warsaw Pact was created as a political instrument in Nikita Khrushchevs
(18941971) Cold War policy in Europe.
The immediate trigger was the admission
of West Germany into NATO on May 5,
1955, and the Austrian State Treaty of
May 15, 1955, that provided for Austrian
neutrality and the withdrawal of Soviet
troops from Austria. The creation of the
Warsaw Pact sent important signals to both
Eastern Europe and the West. On the one
hand, the Soviet Union made clear to its
satellite states that Austrias neutral status
would not be granted to them. On the other
hand, Khrushchev allured the West with a
standing offer to disband the Warsaw Pact
simultaneously with NATO contingent on
East-West agreement on a new collective
security system in Europe.
As the highest alliance body, a Political Consultative Committee (PCC) was

328

Warsaw Pact

Soviet leaders sit at a conference table in the Parliament building in Warsaw, Poland, May
14, 1955, to draft a treaty that will establish a unified military command to rival NATO.
From left to right: Soviet marshal Ivan Konev, supreme commander of the alliance;
Vyacheslav M. Molotov, Soviet foreign minister; Premier Nikolai Bulganin; and defense
minister Georgi Zhukov. (AP Photo)

Following Khrushchevs campaign of deStalinization, Poles and Hungarians in the


fall of 1956 demanded a reform of the
Warsaw Pact to reduce overwhelming Soviet
dominance within the alliance. Polish generals in a memorandum desired to model the
Warsaw Pact more after NATO, while
Hungarys new Communist Party leader
Imre Nagy declared his countrys neutrality
and planned to leave the Warsaw Pact. In
November 1956, the Soviet army invaded
Hungary and crushed the resistance in two
weeks.
In 1958, Romania demanded the withdrawal from its territory of all Soviet troops
and military advisers. To cover Soviet
embarrassment, Khrushchev called this a
unilateral troop reduction contributing to

greater European security. At the height of


the Berlin Crisis, the Warsaw Pacts weakest
and strategically least important country,
Albania, stopped supporting the pact in
1962 and formally withdrew from the alliance in 1968.
The Warsaw Pact was kept in the dark
when Khrushchev provoked the Cuban
Missile Crisis in October 1962. Only after
the crisis was resolved, Eastern European
leaders learned in a secret meeting that a
nuclear war had been narrowly avoided.
Romania reacted promptly to Moscows
non-consultation in such a serious matter.
In 1963, the Romanian government gave
secret assurances to the United States that it
would remain neutral in the event of a confrontation between the superpowers. In the

329

330

Warsaw Pact

same year, Romanian and Polish opposition


prevented Khrushchevs plan to admit
Mongolia into the Warsaw Pact.
In the mid-1960s, the Warsaw Pact
like NATOwent through a major crisis.
The 1965 PCC meeting, invoked by East
Germany, demonstrated profound disagreements among Warsaw Pact allies on matters
such as the German question, nuclear
sharing and nonproliferation, and the
Sino-Soviet split. In early 1966, Brezhnev
proposed a Soviet plan to reform and institutionalize the Warsaw Pact. Resistance by
Moscows allies prevented the implementation of the scheme for more than three years.
In 1968, the Czechoslovak crisis intervened and threatened the cohesion of
the alliance. While the Soviet Union tried
to intimidate the liberal Czechoslovak
government led by Alexander Dubc ek
(19211992) with multilateral Warsaw Pact
military maneuvers, the invading forces on
August 20, 1968, were mostly from the
Soviet Union, with token Polish, Hungarian,
and East German, but no Romanian troops.
Romania denounced the invasion as a violation of international law and demanded the
withdrawal of all Soviet troops and military
advisers from its territory. It also refused
to allow Soviet forces to cross or conduct
exercises on its territory.
The consolidation that resulted from the
PCC session in Budapest in March 1969 transformed the Warsaw Pact into a more consultative organization. It established a committee
of defense ministers, a military council, and a
committee on technology. With these three
new joint bodies, the Warsaw Pact finally
became a genuine military alliance.
In 1976, previous informal gatherings
of the Warsaw Pact foreign ministers were
institutionalized into a committee of
ministers of foreign affairs. In the 1970s,
consultations within Warsaw Pact bodies

primarily dealt with the CSCE process.


Despite detente, however, preparations for
a deep offensive thrust into Western Europe
accelerated and intensified in numerous
military exercises. In 1979, a statute on the
command of the alliance in wartime was
finally accepted by all but Romania after
yearlong controversy.
In 19801981, the Solidarity crisis in
Poland heralded the end of Moscows domination of Eastern Europe. Yet, it did not
pose a serious threat to the Warsaw Pacts
integrity. At first, Moscow was tempted to
threaten the opposition with military exercises and, eventually, military intervention.
To avoid the high political costs, Moscow
in the end trusted that the loyal Polish
military would suppress the opposition on
their own. The imposition of martial law by
General Wojciech Jaruzelski (19232014)
was a major success for Moscow, as it demonstrated that the Moscow-educated Polish
generals protected the interests of the Warsaw Pact even against their own people.
During the Second Cold War in the 1980s,
internal disputes within the Warsaw Pact
increased. Romania demanded cuts in
nuclear and conventional forces as well as
in national defense budgets. It also called
for the dissolution of both Cold War alliances and for the withdrawal of both U.S.
and Soviet forces from Europe.
The issue of an appropriate Warsaw Pact
response to NATOs 1983 deployment of
U.S. Pershing II and cruise missiles, matching
Soviet SS-20 intermediate-range ballistic missiles aimed at Western European targets,
proved to be most divisive for the Eastern alliance. In 1983, Germany, Hungary, and Romania engaged in a damage control exercise to
maintain their ties with the West that they had
established during the era of detente.
At the time of the Warsaw Pacts 30th
anniversary in 1985, Mikhail Gorbachev

World War II Peace Settlement in the Balkans

(1931) became the new Soviet leader. He


improved the role of Warsaw Pact consultations on the desired nuclear and conventional
cuts in the Eastern alliance. At the PCC meeting in Berlin in May 1987, Gorbachev
changed the Warsaw Pact military doctrine
from offensive to defensive. The Eastern
European states did not object to the reduction of the alliances military functions.
In the late 1980s, East Germany, Bulgaria,
andin a reversal of earlier continuing
oppositioneven Romania proposed to
strengthen the Warsaw Pact by improving its
intra-bloc political consultative role.
After the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989,
East and West at first saw merit in keeping
both Cold War alliances in place. In January
and February 1991, however, Czechoslovakia,
Hungary, Poland, and Bulgaria declared that
they would withdraw all support by July 1 of
that year. The Warsaw Pact came to an end
on March 31, 1991, and was officially dissolved at a meeting in Prague on July 1, 1991.
Christian Nuenlist
See also: Cold War in the Balkans, World War
II peace Settlement in the Balkans

Further Reading
Jones, Christopher D. Soviet Influence in
Eastern Europe: Political Autonomy and the
Warsaw Pact. Brooklyn, NY: Praeger, 1981.
Holden, Gerard. The Warsaw Pact: The WTO
and Soviet Security Policy. Oxford: Blackwell, 1989.
Mastny, Vojtech, and Malcolm Byrne, eds. The
Warsaw Pact: A History in Documents.
Budapest: Central European Press, 2005.

World War II Peace Settlement


in the Balkans
The end of World War II in the Balkans left
huge casualties and tremendous destruction

in all of the Balkan countries. All had


suffered foreign invasion, all had endured
aerial bombardment, and all had confronted
partisan warfare. The Soviets replaced the
Germans and Italians as the dominant force
in the region. The parameters of the postwar
settlement began to become apparent as
early September 1943 when the Italians
withdrew from the war. This rendered Italian
claims to Albania, and Greek and Yugoslav
territories, void. A further clarification
occurred a year later, when Soviet forces
invaded Romania in August 1944 and
crossed the Danube into Bulgaria the next
month. Soon afterward, the Soviets established pro-Russian regimes in Bucharest
and Sofia.
The October 1944 meeting between
British prime minister Winston S. Churchill
(1874 1965) and the Soviet dictator Joseph
V. Stalin (18791953) established that the
Soviets would dominate the Balkans.
Churchill agreed that in return for British
predominance in Greece, they could have
primary influence in Bulgaria and Romania
and would evenly share influence in
Yugoslavia. Given the apparent strength of
the Communist-led Partisan movement in
Yugoslavia, there was little likelihood that
the British would be able to establish themselves there after the war. Albania received
no consideration in this agreement. The
presence of Soviet forces on Bulgarian
and Romanian soil and the triumph of the
Yugoslav Partisans, with Soviet assistance,
and of the Albanian Partisans, with Yugoslav Partisan assistance, ensured that Soviet
Russia would exercise dominant influence
in the Balkans after the war. Only Greece,
where British troops landed and fended off
an effort by the Communist-led EAMELAS movement to take power in 1944,
remained outside the sphere of Soviet
economic and political influence.

331

332

World War II Peace Settlement in the Balkans

The end of the war brought important


changes to the Balkans. Compared to the
settlement of World War I in the region, the
territorial arrangements were relatively
slight. The Treaty of Paris of February 10,
1947, established postwar borders. As a
result, Albania obtained the island of Sazan
(Saseno) in the Bay of Vlore from Italy.
This settlement also confirmed Romanias
cession of southern Dobrudja (Dobrudzha)
at the Treaty of Craiova of 1940 to Bulgaria.
Greece obtained the Dodecanese Islands
from Italy. Also confirmed therein were
Romanias western frontiers. This invalidated the division of Transylvania with
Hungary that had occurred in the Second
Vienna Award of 1940. The Treaty of Paris
also sanctioned the Soviet takeover of
Bessarabia and northern Bukovina, first
taken from Romania in June 1940. Finally,
the settlement awarded to Yugoslavia former
Italian territories in Istria and western
Slovenia, the Adriatic ports of Rijeka
(Fiume) and Zadar (Zara), and the Adriatic
islands of Cres (Cherso), Losinj (Lusino),
and Lastovo (Lagosta). The fate of the
Adriatic port of Trieste remained undecided
for the time being.
The end of the war in southeastern Europe
caused significant ethnic changes there. The
Germans murdered most Ashkenazi Jewish
populations of Transylvania and Yugoslavia.
They also exterminated most of the Sephardic Jewish populations of Greece and
Yugoslavia. While the Bulgarians assisted
the Germans in the Bulgarian-occupied
areas of Greece and Yugoslavia, they preserved the Jewish populations of Bulgaria
itself. The Romanians acted against the
Jews of Bessarabia and Bukovina, while
they permitted most of the Jews of Moldavia
and Wallachia to survive. Many of the
Bulgarian and Romanian Jews who survived
left their native countries for Palestine even

before the war ended. The Germans also


murdered significant, but unknown, numbers of Roma who lived in the Balkans.
After the war, a number of population
changes occurred. Most of the German inhabitants of Soviet Bessarabia (Moldovian SSR)
and of Yugoslav Vojovodina were expelled.
Germans from Hungary and Romania who
were not deported to the Soviet Union fled to
the western occupied zones of Austria and
Germany. The anti-Soviet Russian refugee
populations of Bulgaria and Yugoslavia either
fled or faced deportation by Communist
authorities. The Italians of Istria moved to
Italy. Some Albanians moved out of Epirus
to Albania, and some Bulgarians moved
from western Thrace to Bulgaria during the
Greek Civil War.
Because Albania was the least developed
in the fighting, Albania sustained the least
physical damage during the war. The Italian
invasion and the Partisan struggle were not
greatly destructive. Bulgaria underwent
some Allied bombing, but overall did not
suffer much damage from military activity,
either. The Bulgarian Partisans operated
from remote areas, and the Soviet invasion
was unopposed. Greece, Romania, and
Yugoslavia, however, were arenas of extensive combat. The German and Italian invasion of 1941, and the British and Greek
opposition to it, caused considerable physical damage, as did the Greek resistance
struggle against foreign occupation. An
Allied bombing campaign targeted the area
around the Romanian oil fields and oilprocessing facilities at Ploesti, causing considerable damage there. The Soviet invasion
and the subsequent campaign against the
Germans and Hungarians in Transylvania
also brought destruction. Of all the Balkan
countries, Yugoslavia suffered the most
physical damage during World War II.
The Germans inflicted heavy damage on

World War II Peace Settlement in the Balkans

Belgrade when they bombed the Yugoslav


capital on Easter Sunday 1941. The multisided warfare among the occupiers and the
resisters also ruined much of the infrastructure, especially in Bosnia. Finally, the Soviet
invasion of October 1944 brought heavy
combat and much destruction to Belgrade
and northeastern Yugoslavia. Fighting
continued in Croatia until the final days of
the war.
Any reckoning of the effects of World
War II on the Balkans must recognize that
the human and material losses of the Balkan
Wars and World War I occurred only a scant
20 years previously. This narrow period of
relative peace in the region was insufficient
to allow recovery from those damages.

Only after 1945 did the Balkans begin to


revive after the wars of the first half of the
twentieth century.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Albania in World War II; Bulgaria
in World War II; Greece in World War II;
Romania in World War II; Yugoslavia in
World War II

Further Reading
Jelavich, Barbara. History of the Balkans.
Vol. 2, Twentieth Century. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 1983.
Seton-Watson, Hugh. The East European
Revolution. New York: Praeger, 1951.
Stavrianos, L. S. The Balkans since 1453. New
York: Rinehart, 1958.

333

Y
Young Turks

When Abdulhamid II became ruler


in 1876, he first approved and then suspended a new constitution. In response to
the authoritarian rule of Abdulhamid
II after 1876, the Young Ottomans involved themselves in plots to reform the
government. Many of the principal civilian
leaders were exiled to Paris once their
plans were uncovered by government
agents. Those young men formed the
Committee of Union and Progress (CUP)
in 1889 and the League of Private Initiative
and Decentralization around 1902. (The
CUP was the first to adopt the name Young
Turks, after the name of a journal produced
by one of its members. Later, the name
became loosely identified with other
factions advocating the overthrow of
Abdulhamid II.) Both the CUP and the
league called for the military and moral
strengthening of the Ottoman Empire,
equal rights for all ethnic and religious groups, and the restoration of the
Constitution of 1876 that Abdulhamid had
set aside. The CUP favored a strong central
government, however, while the league preferred a more decentralized government
and European assistance.
Spurred on by the revolutionary publications of the exiles, the CUP steadily gained
members in Turkey. It included not only
teachers and students, but also bureaucrats,
army officers, and members of the Muslim
clergy. Chapters were formed in the major
cities of Romania, Bulgaria, and Albania.
An attempt to overthrow the Turkish
government in 1895 failed, and Abdulhamid

The Young Turks were a coalition of groups


that brought about the fall of Ottoman sultan
Abdulhamid II in 1909. Initially welcomed
for their democratic aspirations and modernizing goals for the Ottoman Empire, the
Young Turks did not fare well in the destructive geopolitics of World War I and presided
over the disintegration of the Ottoman state
and rise of Turkish nationalism.
In the nineteenth century, the Ottoman
Empire was disintegrating because of the
failure of the ruling sultans to stem the tide
of decay and the rise of ethnic nationalism
inside their nation to which the stronger
Western powers responded by creating new
states and annexing Ottoman territory into
their own empires. In response, the socalled Tanzimat reforms were instituted by
the Ottoman sultans in the mid-nineteenth
century, which resulted in the modernization
of many parts of the government of the
Ottoman Empire. Hundreds of government
officials were trained in Western methods
and concepts, but some became dissatisfied
with the pace of reform. They believed the
Tanzimat reformers were not interested in
real change, but in accumulating power in
their own hands. Some of those men organized the Young Ottoman organization. The
Young Ottomans promoted constitutionalism and parliamentary government. Many
worked in such agencies as the Bureau of
Translation and the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs, where they had constant contact
with Western institutions and publications.

334

Young Turks

dispersed the revolutionaries to remote parts


of the empire such as Macedonia, believing
that the revolutionary spirit would fade.
However, Abdulhamids move only increased their revolutionary fervor. Next, Abdulhamid offered amnesty and high positions
to exiles to get them to return and work
with the government.
Still, the CUP continued to add followers.
The new secular schools instituted under the
Tanzimat reforms produced thousands of
educated bureaucrats, officers, and intellectuals who came from the lower classes and
resented restrictions placed on them. Many
were strong patriots who believed that if
the sultans corrupt regime were swept
away, they could build a stronger country.
The growing strength of reformers and the
increasing attacks of nationalistic minorities
caused the government to become more
and more repressive. By the beginning of
the twentieth century, followers of the CUP
were increasingly convinced that only
radical change would save Turkey.
The initiative for the Young Turk revolution came from military officers within the
Ottoman Empire, especially those of the
Third Army Corps in Macedonia. Led by
Mustafa Kemal Ataturk (18811938), they
formed the Ottoman Liberty Society in
1906. In 1907, the group agreed to merge
with the CUP, a key development that
brought the League of Private Initiative and
Decentralization and the CUP together
to work toward mutual goals. Events in
1908 spurred them to action. Bosnia and
Herzegovina were annexed by the AustroHungarian Empire, while Bulgaria and
Crete declared their independence from
Ottoman rule. On July 3, the Third Corps
launched a revolt that quickly spread to
other military units throughout the empire.
Unable to rely on his troops, Abdulhamid
restored the Constitution of 1876 and

reconvened the parliament, hoping to undercut the rebellion, but his rule lasted only
another year.
The Young Turks took charge of the
government and began to introduce numerous and diverse reform programs, though
by 1911, the CUPs political agenda was
contested by liberal, conservative, and
nationalistic forces internally. In 1913, the
CUP gained effective control, thanks in
part to rigged elections and in part to the
chaos of the Balkan Wars. By the time it
consolidated its power, not only had it lost
the Balkans (and therefore most of the
empires Christians), but its ideals of a
multinational Ottomanism had faded somewhat to be replaced by a preference for
congressional representatives who were
ethnic Turks and members of the CUP.
The new CUP leadership included Enver
Pasha as war minister, Djemal Pasha
(18721922) as naval minister, and Talaat
Pasha (18741921) as interior minister.
Those men carried out many reforms of the
provincial administrations, which led to
greater centralization. They also secularized
the legal system and provided a better
system of elementary school education,
especially for girls. The Young Turks are
hailed for those modernizing programs.
The CUP government also made Turkish
the language of administration and instruction, however, which alienated the large
number of Arabs in the empire.
With the onslaught of World War I, the
Young Turks chose to ally with Germany,
though in their admiration for the German
military, they overestimated its effectiveness. They also wished to reconquer Egypt
from the British and the Caucasus Mountains from Russia, which made alliance
with Germany logical. The Young Turks
began to fear that the Armenians (Christians
living in eastern Anatolia) would support the

335

336

Ypsilantis, Alexander

Russians, though they had shown no sign of


disloyalty to the Ottoman government since
the overthrow of Abdulhamid II. Acting with
German assistance, the Young Turks ordered
the deportation of the Armenians from the
Ottoman state. When the Armenians resisted,
the Ottoman army unleashed local Turkish
and Kurdish brigands, who killed an
estimated 1 million during the Armenian
Genocide and scattered the rest.
Their genocidal persecution of the
Armenians did not endear the Young Turks
to the Arabs. Though theoretically united
by Islam, many Arabs were suspicious of
the way the Young Turks combined religion
with nationalism. More damage was
done, however, by the former naval minister,
Djemal, as he and his troops rested in Syria
during 1915 to reorganize an attack on the
British and the Suez Canal. Jemals treatment of the Syrians was so cruel and arbitrary that he inspired them to join in the
British-sponsored Arab Uprising, led by the
Hussein clan from Mecca. That revolt forced
Djemal to withdraw from Syria, ceding control of the entire region south of Anatolia to
the French and the British.
By late 1918, military defeat appeared
imminent, and the CUP leaders resigned
from government in October, just a month
before the Armistice of Mudros ended the
war. In spite of their misfortunes and their
mistakes, however, the Young Turks are
regarded by Turkish people as having led
an important phase in the regeneration
of the nation. Their transformation from
Ottoman to Turkish nationalism and their
ideas about Islam allowed for subsequent
rulers to progress more rapidly. Arguing
that religion should be a matter of conscience and that the legal aspects of Islam
should be surrendered to secular legislation,
they called for a split between Islam and
the state. That idea became the foundation

for the policy of secularization later adopted


by the Turkish republic under Ataturk.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Balkan Wars, 19121913, Causes;
Kemal, Mustafa (18811938)

Further Reading
Ahmad, Feroz. The Young Turks. Oxford:
Oxford University Press, 1969.
Berkes, Niyazi. The Development of Secularism in Turkey. London: Routledge, 1999.
Hanioglu, M. Sukru. The Young Turks in
Opposition. Oxford: Oxford University
Press, 1995.
Shaw, Stanford J., and Ezel Kural Shaw. History of the Ottoman Empire and Modern
Turkey. Vol. 2, Reform, Revolution and
Republic: The Rise of Modern Turkey
18081975. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1977.

Ypsilantis, Alexander
(17921828)
Alexander Ypsilantis was born on
December 12, 1792, in the Phanar district
of Constantinople, to a Greek family long
prominent in Ottoman administration. The
family fled to St. Petersburg, Russia, in
1805 when his father, the Prince (Voivode)
of the Ottoman-controlled Danubian principality of Wallachia, was about to be arrested
by Ottoman authorities for supporting the
Serbian revolt. Under royal patronage, he
received a commission upon graduating
from the Household Cavalry of the Imperial
Guards in 1810.
Ypsilantis served bravely in the Russian
cavalry during the Napoleonic Wars starting
with the French invasion of Russia. By
July 1813, he had risen to the rank of
colonel, and while participating in the Battle
of Dresden (August 1813), he lost his right

Yugoslavia

arm, which ended his fighting career. During


the Congress of Vienna, he served as one of
Czar Alexander Is (17771825) adjutants,
becoming his aide-de-camp in 1816. The
following year, he was promoted to major
general.
In April 1820, Ypsilantis was elected and
took the leadership of Filiki Etairia (Society
of Friends), a secret organization in Odessa
plotting to overthrow Ottoman rule
and establish an independent Greece. In
March 1821, Ypsilantis and other Greek
officers in Russian service crossed the
Pruth River into the Danubian principality
of Moldavia to begin the liberation of
Greece. He hoped his revolt would be supported by Russia and the Orthodox Bulgarians, Romanians, and Serbs. Instead, the
Russians condemned him and relieved him
of his rank.
Czar Alexander I viewed Ypsilantiss
actions as against the Holy Alliance, while
most Balkan Orthodox Christians largely
ignored him. He was unable to maintain
cooperation with the Romanian peasant
leader Tudor Vladimirescu (17801821)
and denounced him as a traitor because of
the Romanians willingness to compromise
with the Ottomans. Ypsiliantis lost a series
of humiliating battles by mid-June and fled
to Austria, where he was imprisoned for
seven years before being released in 1827
through the intervention of Czar Nicholas I
(17961855). He died in Vienna on January 31, 1828.
Gregory C. Ference
See also: Greek War of Independence, 1821
1832; Serbian War of Independence, 1804
1818; Vladimirescu, Tudor (17801821)

Further Reading
Dakin, Douglas. The Greek Struggle for
Independence, 18211833. Berkeley:
University of California Press, 1973.

Prousis, Theophilis C. Russian Society and


the Greek Revolution. DeKalb: Northern
Illinois University Press, 1994.

Yugoslavia
Yugoslavia itself did not exist until after
World War I, and the region, which makes
up part of the Balkan Peninsula, was long
dominated by foreign empires. Several distinct cultural and ethnic groups have inhabited the Balkans for hundreds of years and
continue to influence the social and political
fortunes of the region today.
The social and political landscape of the
Balkan Peninsula was dramatically altered
by the rise of the Turkish Ottoman Empire,
which superseded the crumbling Byzantine
Empire in the east and aggressively expanded westward into the European continent.
At the Battle of Kosovo (1389), Serb forces
were defeated by Turkish troops, and for
the next three centuries, Serbia remained a
vassal state to the Turkish Empire. Although
it was a military loss, the Battle of Kosovo
became a fundamental event in the formation of Serbian national identity. After their
victory in Kosovo, the Ottomans continued
their military campaign in the Balkans
and annexed Bosnia, Herzegovina, and
Montenegro by 1499. The Turk conquest
dramatically altered the Slavs established
social systems by destroying the power of
the local nobility. In the regions of Bosnia
and what is modern-day Albania, the social
structure was less drastically affected since
many inhabitants converted to Islam, which
won the favor of their Ottoman rulers.
As the Ottoman Empire fell into decline
in the seventeenth century, the Habsburg
Austro-Hungarian Empire expanded its influence in the Balkans. By the early nineteenth century, Ottoman control of the

337

338

Yugoslavia

Balkans was practically nonexistent, and


the vacuum that was created by the ebb of
Turkish power opened the door for the
growth of nationalism among the Balkans
ethnic groups. The Balkan Slavs created
their sense of national identity by drawing
on their history and ancient folklore as well
as their religious heritage. However, realization of nationalist ambitions required dependence on the aid of foreign powers, since the
Balkan groups were not powerful enough to
establish independence on their own. A
nominal Croatian state was created with permission by the Austro-Hungarian Empire in
1868, and Serbia and Montenegro were
granted independence by the Treaty of San
Stefano (1878) at the conclusion of the
Russo-Ottoman War. Nationalism had the
negative effect of stirring up ethnic rivalries,
often in the form of territorial disputes
among the various Balkan groups. Particularly at a loss were the regions Muslims,
who had long depended on the Ottoman
social and economic infrastructure to protect
their religion and way of life.
The emerging Balkan states cooperated
long enough to drive out what little
remained of the Ottoman presence in Europe
in the first of the Balkan Wars in 1912. By
1913, unity had collapsed, and the second
of the Balkan Wars broke out as Serbia,
Romania, and Greece fought over the spoils
of their victory against the Turks. The contentious nationalism of the Balkans soon
became the tinderbox that lit the fuse of
World War I with the assassination in
June 1914 of the Austro-Hungarian archduke Franz Ferdinand by a Bosnian Serb
nationalist.
The downfall of both the AustroHungarian and Ottoman empires by the end
of the war opened the door for the realization of Balkan nationalistic desires. On
December 1, 1918, the Kingdom of Serbs,

Croats, and Slovenes was officially established under the leadership of the Serbian
king Peter Karageorgevic (18441921).
Although a unified Slavic state was never
the initial goal of the various Balkan ethnic
groups, most political leaders realized that
unification was their best option, at least
for the moment. Those hopes proved overly
optimistic, however. Over the protests of
both Croats and Slovenes, the 1921 Yugoslavian constitution created a centralized
government that was predominantly under
Serbian control. Over the next several
years, non-Serbian groups grew increasingly
bitter and disenchanted with the government. In 1929, King Alexander I (1888
1934), Peters son successor, responded to
the growing discontent by abrogating the
constitution, forming a dictatorship, and
renaming the country the Kingdom of
Yugoslavia (the Kingdom of Southern
Slavs). His actions did little to allay nonSerb fears, and between 1929 and 1939,
tensions grew among the nations ethnic
groups, which led to the 1934 assassination
of Alexander by the Ustas a, a Croatian
fascist organization.
When World War II broke out, Yugoslavia
tried to remain neutral, but the regents who
ruled in the name of Prince Paul gave in to
German pressure in 1941 and formed an
alliance with Adolf Hitler. The alliance
prompted widespread popular discontent and
public protest, and a contingent of military
officers moved quickly to overthrow the
regency. In April 1941, Germany responded
by invading Yugoslavia. The country was
occupied by German, Italian, Bulgarian, and
Hungarian forces, along with the Ustasa.
Two rival resistance groups rose up to
etniks,
oppose the Nazi occupation: the C
Serbian nationalists; and the Partisans, a
Communist group led by a Croatian-Slovene
named Josip Broz Tito (18921980). While

Yugoslavia

both groups fought the Nazis, they ultimately


had different ideas for the reconstitution of
the Yugoslav state. The Cetniks sought a
resumption of Serbian dominance while the
Partisans wanted to establish a Communist
federation divided along ethnic lines.
Although both sides committed atrocities
during the war, the Partisans secured the support of the Allies and gained control of the
country when the war ended.
Under Tito, the country was organized as
a federation with six republics loosely divided along ethnic lines: Serbia, Croatia,
Slovenia, Macedonia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Montenegro. Yugoslavia was
established as a Communist state, and more
liberal political organizations were suppressed. The government moved rapidly to
introduce nationalization and other instruments of Communist control, but over time,
it developed a less centralized model that
included workers councils that managed
individual enterprises. Yugoslavia gradually
adopted an independent line that initially
alienated the Yugoslav leadership from the
rest of the Communist bloc. Eventually,
Titos regime was able to forge a middle
way, which often had strained relations
with both the East and the West. Not surprisingly, Tito was a key player in the formation
of the nonaligned movement.
The death of Tito in 1980 revealed the
cracks in the Yugoslav political system.
He was replaced by a collective presidency
made up of representatives from each of
the republics. However, the nations economic problems, which included a huge foreign debt, began to cause difficulties, and
the new government proved weak. Both
problems facilitated a revival of the ethnic
and religious rivalries that were suppressed
under Tito. A nationalist movement in
Serbia gained control of the League of
Communists of Yugoslavia, and Slobodan

Milosevic (19412006), an extreme nationalist, gained power in Serbia. Milos evic


instituted severe measures to support his
nationalist cause. Those measures included press censorship and the reversal of
autonomy for the Kosovo and Vojvodina
regions, which had populations that were
predominantly Albanian and Hungarian,
respectively.
Milosevic tried to increase the centralization of power and to revive the concept of a
greater Serbia at the same time that Croatian
and Slovenian leaders sought increased
decentralization. As it became clear that
Milosevic was intent on increasing Serbian
authority, Croatia and Slovenia declared
their independence from Yugoslavia in
June 1991. Despite a constitutional provision that allowed for the secession of republics, the Serbian-dominated Yugoslav army
actively opposed the withdrawal of Croatia
and Slovenia. The independence of Slovenia
was conceded after a 10-day war that the
Yugoslav forces lost. However, the Serb
minority in Croatia joined forces with the
Yugoslav army to gain control of vast
territory there.
Yugoslavia had a similar response when
Bosnia and Herzegovina seceded the following year. With their campaign of ethnic
cleansing, the Serbs succeeded in killing or
forcing out much of the Muslim and Croatian populations of large parts of Bosnia.
The United Nations imposed international
sanctions against Yugoslavia for its actions.
Around the same time, Macedonia also
seceded without much of a struggle from
Belgrade because its Serbian population
was small. The Yugoslav government reconstituted the country as a two-republic federation that now included only the dominant
Serbia and smaller Montenegro. International sanctions against Yugoslavia were
eased in 1995 after Milos evic blockaded

339

340

Yugoslavia, Axis Occupation Forces in World War II

the Serbian forces in Bosnia and signed the


Dayton Agreement (1995), which returned
large territories to Bosnia and Croatia; however, there was continued Serbian resistance
to the peace plan from within those two
countries. Milosevic had been forced to act
in part because of the devastation the sanctions had brought to Yugoslavia with inflation running at unheard-of rates and the
state under the threat of disintegration.
By early 1998, however, Milos evic had
renewed his campaign for a greater Serbia
by turning his attention to the predominantly
ethnic Albanian region of Kosovo. Though
the Serb-controlled Yugoslav army was sent
into the province ostensibly to root out
members of the rebel Kosovo Liberation
Army, the military campaign led to numerous civilian deaths, as hundreds of thousands of villagers fled to the mountains and
forests for safety. Milos evic s refusal to
sign an internationally brokered peace
agreement in March 1999 precipitated a
North Atlantic Treaty Organization air campaign to crush Serbias military strength and
a Serbian offensive to drive out Kosovos
Albanian population. Milosevic attempted
to extend his hold over the country by calling early elections in September 2000; however, he was surprised by the publics
election of Vojislav Kostunica (1944).
Milosevic initially refused to concede defeat
and attempted to void a portion of the ballots. His actions incited massive protests,
which saw demonstrators take over the
Federal Assembly building while the police
stood by; hours later, Milosevic agreed to
step down. Shortly after Milosevics defeat
at the polls, the European Union and
the United States lifted sanctions against
Yugoslavia, which had been in place since
1998. On February 5, 2003, the Yugoslav
Parliament proclaimed the creation of the

new state community of Serbia and


Montenegro.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Cold War in the Balkans; Dayton
Peace Accords; Tito, Josip Broz (1892
1980); Yugoslavia in World War II

Further Reading
Clissold, Stephen, ed. A Short History of Yugoslavia: From Early Times to 1966. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1966.
Dedijer, Vladimir, et al. History of Yugoslavia.
Translated by Kordija Kveder. New York:
McGraw-Hill, 1974.
Magas, Branka. The Destruction of Yugoslavia: Tracking the Breakup 19801992.
New York: Verso, 1993.

Yugoslavia, Axis Occupation


Forces in World War II
On April 6, 1941, German, Hungarian, and
Italian units attacked Yugoslavia. These
included the German Second and 12th
Armies, eight Hungarian brigades, and the
Italian Second and Ninth Armies. The
invaders crossed Yugoslavias borders with
Germany (Austria), Hungary, Romania, and
Bulgaria. Confronted with overwhelming
force, the Yugoslav armed forces disintegrated within a week.
In the aftermath of the Yugoslav defeat,
the Germans and their allies divided the country. Germany annexed northern Slovenia,
while Italy annexed southern Slovenia and
Dalmatia and attached Kosovo to its Albanian
possession. Hungary took a part of eastern
Slovenia, and Bac ka, a part of Croatia.
Bulgaria, which did not participate in the
actual invasion, annexed Macedonia. Nominally independent states emerged in Croatia,
Montenegro, and Serbia. Germany and its

Yugoslavia, Axis Occupation Forces in World War II

three allies maintained military forces on


these territories throughout the course of the
war. These soon came under attack from
indigenous resistance organizations, including but not limited to the Serbian-oriented
Cetniks and the Communist-oriented Partisans. Bulgarian, German, Hungarian and Italian forces spent much of their time and effort
in operations directed against this resistance.

Bulgaria
The Bulgarians considered Macedonia to
be a liberated part of Bulgaria. In the
aftermath of the Yugoslav defeat, the
Bulgarian Fifth Army occupied Macedonia.
It established its headquarters in Skoplje.
The Bulgarians encountered no resistance.
Bulgarian police and special units also
were assigned to Macedonia. This amounted
to around 40,000 men. At the beginning of
1942, the Germans requested additional
Bulgarian troops be sent to Yugoslavia
so that German occupation forces could
be transferred to the Eastern Front. The
Bulgarian First Army deployed to southern
Serbia and established its headquarters at
Nis . The Bulgarians undertook stringent
anti-Partisan actions in this region. In 1943,
Bulgarian units also participated in antiPartisan operations in Bosnia and Montenegro, together with German, Italians, and
some Cetnik formations. On September 9,
1944, the Bulgarians changed sides and
began joint activities with the Red Army,
sweeping through Macedonia up through
Serbia and into Hungary.
Germany
The largest number of foreign soldiers on
Yugoslav territory came from Germany.
German forces occupied Serbia, Vojvodina,
the northeastern portion of independent
Croatia (NDA), and northern Slovenia. Initially the Germans had hoped to leave the

occupation of Yugoslavia to allied and collaborationist forces. The development of resistance in the summer of 1941 made this
impossible. Especially important for the
Germans was control of the vital ViennaSalonika railroad, and some important
mining locations.
With most of its best units committed to
the Eastern Front, the Germans relied upon
second-rate units, made up of older personnel, and locally raised units. Chief among
the latter was the SS Prinz Eugen Division.
Increased resistance activity force the
Germans to increase the quality and size of
their occupation forces. They collected
several formations in Army Group E, the
former Twelfth Army, commanded by Luftwaffe general Alexander Lo hr (1885
1947), an erstwhile Austro-Hungarian and
Austrian officer. The formations in this command undertook seven anti-Partisan offensives from 1942 to 1944. Partisan activities
and the Allied landings in Sicily caused the
Germans to further increase their troop
levels in Yugoslavia because of concerns
that the Allies might attempt to cross the
Adriatic. Army Group F under the command
of Field Marshal Maximilian von Weichs
(18811954) formed with its headquarters
in Belgrade in August 1943. The Second
Panzer Army from the Eastern Front
strengthened this formation. It had responsibility for all German forces in Yugoslavia.
Army Group E assumed control of Greece.
The defections of Romania and Bulgaria
in August and September and the entry of
the Red Army into these countries made the
German position in the western Balkans
untenable. Army Group E began to withdrawal from Greece. The German formations
slowly retreated to the north under pressure
from the Partisans and the Red Army. Army
Group E ended up in Austria. Army Group F
was dissolved in March 1945. Its remnants

341

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Yugoslavia, Collaborationist Forces in World War II

combined with Army Group E. All these


German formations surrendered in Austria in
May 1945.

Hungary
On April 11, five days after the German
and Italian attack, the Third Hungarian
Army moved into Yugoslavia, meeting
some resistance. The Hungarians annexed
eastern Slovenia Prekmurje parts of Croatia,
Medjimurje, Baranja, and Backa. The Hungarian army committed some atrocities
against the Jewish and Serbian populations
of the latter two regions. At Novi Sad during
January 1942, the Hungarians murdered
around 3,000 or 4,000 Jews and Serbs
and threw their bodies into the Danube.
Hungarian control of these regions ended in
the fall of 1944, when Partisan and Red
Army forces ejected the retreating Germans.
Hungarian possession of eastern Slovenia
ended only in May 1945.
Italy
The Italian occupation of Yugoslavia was
complicated. They annexed Dalmatia and
southern Slovenia directly. They annexed
most of Kosovo and western Macedonia to
their Albanian possession. They also established an independent Montenegro. Finally,
they maintained forces in southeastern
Croatia (NDH). This complex arrangement
required a considerable commitment of
Italian forces, amounting to 24 Divisions,
divided between the Second Army headquartered in Susak, Dalmatia and the Ninth
Army headquartered in Tirana, Albania.
The Italian forces in Croatia and Montenegro soon found themselves confronted
with strong Partisan activities. The Italians
etnik
established close relations with local C
units and participated with their Bulgarian
and German allies in anti-Partisan actions.
They also engaged in a dispute with the

Bulgarians over the border of western


Macedonia. On September 8, 1943, Italy
surrendered to the Allies. This left the Italian forces in Yugoslavia in disarray. Some
fled to Italy, some joined the Partisans, but
many surrendered to or were captured by
the Germans. The Germans shot some of
these unfortunates and sent most of the
others to Germany as slave laborers.
Richard C. Hall
See also: C etniks; Partisans, Yugoslavia;
Yugoslavia, Collaborationist Forces in World
War II; Yugoslavia in World War II

Further Reading
Pavlowitch, Stavan K. Hitlers New Disorder:
The Second World War in Yugoslavia. New
York: Columbia University Press, 2008.
Thomas, N., and K. Mikulan. Axis Forces in
Yugoslavia, 19411945. Oxford: Osprey,
1995.
Tomasevich, Jozo. War and Revolution in
Yugoslavia, 19411945: Occupation and
Collaboration. Stanford, CA: Stanford
University Press, 2001.

Yugoslavia, Collaborationist
Forces in World War II
The collapse of Yugoslavia during the
German-Italian invasion of April 1941
resulted in a confusing number of local
forces who assisted the occupiers. This collaboration took place across all ethnic and
physical boarders of the former Yugoslav
state. The armed components of collaborationist movements provided varying degrees
of military assistance to the Bulgarian,
German, Hungarian, and Italian occupiers.

Croatia
By far the largest component of the collaborationist forces in Yugoslavia came from

Yugoslavia, Collaborationist Forces in World War II

Croatia. There in April 1941, the Germans


and Italians, failing to secure help from
prewar Croatian politicians in setting up
an independent Croatian state (NDH),
which included prewar Croatia and BosniaHerzegovina. To run this state, the occupiers
turned to the exiled leaders of the Croatian
fascist movement, the Ustasa (Insurgents).
The leader of the NDH was Ante Pavelic
(18891959). The Germans and Italians divided the NDH into three zones. The Italians
annexed much of Dalmatia, including Kotor
to comprise Zone 1. The Italians maintained
garrisons in southwestern Croatia. This was
Zone 2. The Germans occupied the northeastern part of the NDH for Zone 3.
The NDH contributed two military formations to the Nazi cause. The first was the
regular armed forces, under the command
of the former Austro-Hungarian officer
Slavko Kvaternik (18781947). They consisted of a regular army, of around
55,000 men, an air arm, a navy and a labor
service. There was also a national police
force. The Croat army mainly fought against
Partisan units in Bosnia and Cetnik bands in
the Serbian areas of Croatia, the old AustroHungarian military frontier. The Croatian
armed forces, however, were the only collaborationist forces from Yugoslavia to
serve outside the territory of the former
Yugoslav state. Some Croatian airmen participated in the campaign against Soviet
Russia from 1941 to 1944. Discouraged by
the Italians from operating in the Adriatic
Sea, the Croats established a small naval
force in the Sea of Azov. After the Italian
surrender, the Croatian navy deployed to
the Adriatic Sea. Also in May 1942, the
369th Regiment of Croatian infantry
deployed with Army Group South to Soviet
Russia. After participating in several major
operations and earning German praise for

its fighting abilities, it was destroyed at


Stalingrad.
In addition to the regular Croatian armed
forces, there were also Ustasa units. These
were the Croatian counterpart of the Nazi
German SS (Schutzstaffel). Like the SS, the
Ustasa units were ideological. They mainly
etnik and
took part in actions against C
Partisan guerillas. They employed brutal
methods and perpetrated many atrocities
during these actions. On November 21,
1944, the Croatian regular armed forces
and the Ustasa formations combined into
the Croatian Armed Forces under the formal
command of Pavelic . The Croats fought
alongside the Nazis until the very end of
World War II. At the end of the war, the
victorious Partisans executed many of the
Croat survivors at Bleiburg. Many others
served terms of terms of imprisonment in
Yugoslavia. Pavelic escaped to Argentina.
Wounded in an assassination attempt there
in 1957, he died in Spain in 1959.

Serbia
After the rapid defeat of the Royal Yugoslav
Army in April 1941, the Germans established
a quasi-independent Serbian state with frontiers roughly corresponding to Serbias pre1912 borders. A number of Serbian military
formations rose to collaborate with the
German occupation. Foremost among these
were the Serbian State Guard. The commander of this unit, Milan Nedic (1877
1946), a former Serbian and Yugoslav officer,
attempted to act as the Serbian Petain. The
Serbian State Guard served as a national
police force. After Nedic organized it in
March 1942, it established connections with
Draza Mihajlovics (18961946) Cetniks.
etniks operated
The State Guard and the C
more or less together and cooperated
in actions directed against the Partisans. The

343

344

Yugoslavia, Collaborationist Forces in World War II

remnants of this formation retreated to the


northwest during the fall of 1944. Many surrendered to British forces in Austria at the
end of the war. Nedic died in prison in mysterious circumstances after the war.
Another important Serbian collaborationist formation was the Serbian Volunteer Command. Serbian politician Dimitrije Lojotic
(18911945), the leader of the fascist Zbor
(assembly) movement, formed this armed
organization on September 15, 1941. Under
the nominal command of General Nedic, this
formation of around 7,000 men engaged in
anti-Partisan actions in Serbia. In the fall of
1944, it retreated to Slovenia. At the end of
the war, some members of this unit succeeded
in remaining in Italy, others returned to a
difficult fate in Titos Yugoslavia.
A somewhat unusual formation in Serbia
that collaborated with the Germans actually
consisted of mainly Russians. This was the
Russian Defense Corps. Anti-Soviet Russians exiles living in Yugoslavia formed
this unit on September 12, 1941. It comprised a Cossack cavalry regiment and four
infantry regiments. Eventually some younger Russian exiles and Soviet POWs joined.
It mainly engaged in anti-Partisan actions
in Serbia and later in Bosnia. In the fall of
1944, it joined the retreat to the northwest.
In May 1945, the remnants of this formation
surrendered to the British in Austria.
By far the most important force that
fought as well as collaborated with the
occupiers was the Cetniks. The original purpose of the C etniks, organized by Royal
Yugoslav Army colonel Dragoljub Draza
Mihajlovic (18931946), was resistance to
the German occupation. The rapid gain in
power by Josip Broz Titos (18921980)
Partisans, however, forced the Cetniks to cooperate at times with the occupation forces.
They received arms and ammunition from
the Germans and Italians and participated

in operations against the Partisans. Usually


this was done by local commanders.

Slovenia
After the collapse of Yugoslavia, the
Germans and Italians divided Slovenia
between themselves, with Hungary receiving
a small portion. Slovene formations began
operating in the Italian section as a Slovene
Legion in the spring of 1941. These operated
as a local gendarmerie. Two Slovene formations gradually came into being. The Slovene
Blues were affiliated with the Cetniks. This
was the largest pro-Cetnik organization outside of the areas of Serbian population, but
never had more than 500 men. The Blue command maintained contact with the Italians.
The other important Slovene formation
was affiliated with the pro-war Slovene Peoples Party. The Italians together with this
party organized Village Guard units in
1942. They came to be known as White
Guards, and numbered around 2,500 men.
These were strongly Catholic and antiCommunist. After the Italian collapse in
September 1943, the Partisans launched an
offensive that inflicted serious damage on
the Blues and the Whites. The remaining
Slovenes joined together as the Slovene
Defense Legion. Led by former AustroHungarian and Royal Yugoslav officer
General Leon Rupnik (18801946), the
Slovene Defense Legion functioned as
German auxiliaries. At the end of the war,
many members retreated to Austria. Those
returned by the British to Yugoslavia suffered the same fate at the hands of the Partisans as other German collaborators. Titos
government executed Rupnik after the war.
Other Formations
Separatist Montenegrins (Greens) organized
a small unit of Voluntary Anti-Communist
Militia under Italian control in August 1941.

Yugoslavia, Invasion of, 1941

These later adopted the name Nationalist


Army of Montenegro and Herzegovina.
Never amounting to more than 5,000 men,
this formation generally cooperated with
the Italians and much larger Montenegrin
Cetnik units against the Partisans. They continued this cooperation under the Germans
after the Italian withdrawal and retreated
north in the fall of 1944. The British handed
most of them over to the Partisans in
May 1945.
The Germans organized three SS divisions from Yugoslav nationals. The first of
these was SS Volunteer Mountain Division
Prinz Eugen, formed in March 1942. It was
composed of ethnic Germans (Volksdeutsch)
from Yugoslavia, with others from Hungary
and Romania. It mainly participated in antiPartisan actions in Bosnia, Croatia, and
Serbia.
The Germans also organized a Bosniak
SS division, the 13th Waffen SS Mountain
Division Handschar in February 1943.
Named after a Bosnian sword, this was the
first non-Germanic SS unit. Members mutinied during training in France in September 1943. It then was sent to Bosnia and
Croatia in 1944 for anti-Partisan operations.
It retreated north in 1944 and fought in
Hungary and northern Yugoslavia.
Another German formation that consisted
of Yugoslav nationals was the 21st Waffen
Mountain Division SS Skanderbeg. Named
for the fifteenth-century Albanian hero, this
formation was made up of mainly Kosovo
Albanians. Desperate for military manpower, the Germans established this unit in
April 1944. It achieved notoriety for its
actions against the Serbian civilian population of Kosovo. Always ill-disciplined and
not effective militarily, the Skanderbeg
Division was disbanded on November 1,
1944. Remnants continued to fight as the
Skanderbeg Regiment (Kampfgruppe) in

Yugoslavia. By January 1945, the survivors


were incorporated into the Prinz Eugen
Division.
Richard C. Hall
etniks; Greens (Montenegro);
See also: C
Lojotic , Dimitrije, Mihajlovic , Dragoljub
Draza (18931946); Nedic, Milan (1877
1946); Partisans, Yugoslavia; Yugoslavia in
World War II

Further Reading
Cohen, Philip J. Serbias Secret War:
Propaganda and the Deceit of History. College Station: Texas A&M University Press,
1996.
Mu ller, Rolf-Dieter. The Unknown Eastern
Front: The Wehrmacht and Hitlers Foreign
Soldiers. London: I. B. Taurus, 2012.
Pavlowitch, Stavan K. Hitlers New Disorder:
The Second World War in Yugoslavia. New
York: Columbia University Press, 2008.
Thomas, N., and K. Mikulan. Axis Forces in
Yugoslavia, 19411945. Oxford: Osprey,
1995.
Tomasevich, Jozo. War and Revolution in
Yugoslavia, 19411945: Occupation and
Collaboration. Stanford, CA: Stanford
University Press, 2001.

Yugoslavia, Invasion of, 1941


On December 13, 1940, Adolf Hitler issued
orders for the conquest of Greece (Operation
Marita) to succor the Italians in Albania and
protect Germanys southern flank during the
planned invasion of the Soviet Union. Use of
the Belgrade-Nis-Salonika railroad line was
essential for German operations in Greece,
and thus the cooperation of Yugoslavia
was needed. Accordingly, Hitler pressured
Yugoslavia to join the Tripartite Pact on
March 25, 1941. This move precipitated
a bloodless military coup in Belgrade
on March 2627. Prince Regent Paul

345

346

Yugoslavia, Invasion of, 1941

Upon capturing the city, German occupation


forces hoist the swastika flag at the city hall in
Sarajevo, capital of Bosnia and Herzegovina,
in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, April 16, 1941.
(AP Photo)

(18931976) fled to Greece, 17-year-old


King Peter II (19231970) took the throne,
and the Yugoslav air forces General
Dusan Simovic (18821962) formed a new
government. Although Simovic assured
Hitler that Yugoslavia would remain
friendly, the Fu hrer was enraged by the
coup, and on March 27, he issued Directive
No. 25 ordering the German conquest of
Yugoslavia, which assigned supporting
roles in the operation to both Italy and
Hungary.
The German High Command quickly prepared plans for the operation and began to
assemble the necessary forces. The latter
included General Maximilian von Weichs
(18811954) Second Army, then in Austria
and southwest Hungary (11 divisions in four
corps); Lieutenant General Georg-Hans

Reinhardts (18871963) XLI Panzer Corps,


near Timisoara, Romania (1 Schutzstaffel
[SS] motorized infantry division, plus one
infantry and one panzer regiment); and
General Paul Ludwig Ewald von Kleists
(18811954) First Panzer Group (five divisions in two corps), assembling in Bulgaria
for the planned invasion of Greece. Luftwaffe
assets assigned to the operation included
some 1,148 aircraft of the Fourth Air Fleet in
Austria, the VIII Air Corps in Bulgaria, and
the X Air Corps on Sicily.
The weak Yugoslav army was no match
for the Germans. Mobilized on March 29, it
totaled fewer than 1 million men in 35 divisions, other troops under three army groups,
one independent field army headquarters,
and the Coastal Defense Command. The
Yugoslavs had few modern tanks and little
artillery and relied on animal transport.
Most Yugoslav war mate riel had been
obtained from Germany, and there were
few reserves of ammunition or other supplies. The Yugoslav air force had some
459 military aircraft, its airfields were vulnerable, and it lacked spares and other
equipment. The Yugoslav navy consisted of
one old training cruiser, four modern
destroyers, four submarines, two river monitors, and 16 old motor torpedo boats. Its
ships were manned largely by Croats. Politically unreliable, the navy would play no role
in the coming campaign.
After only 10 days for planning and preparations, the Germans began their assault on
April 6, 1941, with a massive air attack on
Belgrade that killed some 17,000 civilians,
destroyed much of the Yugoslav air force,
and cut communications between the Yugoslav Supreme Command and its units in the
field. The same day, Field Marshal Siegmund Wilhelm Lists (18801971) Twelfth
Army launched Operation Marita. The
German XL Panzer Corps took Skopje on

Yugoslavia in World War II

April 7, thereby cutting off the Yugoslav line


of retreat toward Salonika, and the Twelfth
Army continued into Greece.
Plans for Operation No. 25 called for a
three-pronged attack aimed at Belgrade.
The First Panzer Group attacked from Bulgaria on April 8 on the Nis -KragujevacBelgrade axis, overcame stiff resistance by
the Yugoslav Fifth Army, and took Nis on
April 9. At the same time, the XLI Panzer
Corps attacked from Romania and plowed
through the Yugoslav Sixth Army. Using
bridges over the Danube, Drava, and Sava
Rivers seized by the Second Army between
April 1 and 7, the XLVI Panzer Crops
attacked toward Belgrade on April 10, routing the Yugoslav Fourth and Second Armies
and reaching Novi Sad on April 11. That
same day, Zagreb fell to the LI Infantry
Corps, aided by the 14th Panzer Division
detached from the XLVI Panzer Corps.
Meanwhile, the XLIX Mountain Corps
forced the surrender of Yugoslav forces in
Slovenia, and the Italian Second Army
attacked from Trieste down the Yugoslav
coast, meeting little resistance.
On the evening of April 12, the three converging German corps surrounded Belgrade,
and the next morning, German forces entered
Belgrade unopposed. The Second Army then
assumed responsibility for all operations in
Yugoslavia and acted to prevent the withdrawal of Yugoslav forces into the Serbian
mountains. General von Weichs two pursuit
groups moved toward Sarajevo from Zagreb
and from Belgrade via Uzice. On April 14,
the Yugoslav government was evacuated to
Greece, and negotiations for an armistice
began. Sarajevo fell the next day, and on
April 17, Yugoslavia surrendered unconditionally at Belgrade. The armistice went into
effect on April 18, ending a 12-day campaign
in which the Germans had only 558 casualties, including 151 killed. Yugoslavia was

then annexed or occupied by the victorious


Axis powers, except for Croatia and BosniaHerzegovina, which formed the pro-Axis
Independent State of Croatia.
Charles R. Shrader
See also: Yugoslavia, Axis Occupation Forces
in World War II; Yugoslavia in World War II

Further Reading
Barefield, Michael R. Overwhelming Force,
Indecisive Victory: The German Invasion
of Yugoslavia, 1941. Fort Leavenworth,
KS: School of Advanced Military Studies,
U.S. Army Command and General Staff
College, 1993.
Jukic, Ilija. The Fall of Yugoslavia. New York:
Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1974.
Littlefield, Frank. Germany and Yugoslavia,
19331941: The German Conquest of
Yugoslavia. New York: Columbia University Press, 1988.
Shores, Christopher, Brian Cull, and Nicola
Malizia. Air War for Yugoslavia, Greece,
and Crete, 194041. London: Grub Street,
1999.
U.S. Department of the Army. The German
Campaign in the Balkans (Spring 1941).
Department of the Army Pamphlet 20
260. Washington, DC: Headquarters,
Department of the Army, 1953.

Yugoslavia in World War II


During World War II, Yugoslavia was the
setting for Europes greatest resistance
struggle but also a bloody civil war. A country of some 16 million people in 1941,
Yugoslavia was one of the new states formed
at the end of World War I. Serbia, which had
been on the winning Allied side in the war,
was its nucleus, with the addition of territories from the defunct Austro-Hungarian
Empire. Unfortunately, the new state consisted of nationalities that had been on

347

348

Yugoslavia in World War II

opposing sides in the war and had strong


religious, linguistic, and cultural differences. The nation began as the Kingdom of
Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes, but in 1929, it
was renamed Yugoslavia, the land of the
South Slavs. The country was held together
not so much by common ties as by outside
pressures and by the fact that its peoples
believed they had a better chance of surviving together rather than separately.
The Serbs were the largest single nationality in Yugoslavia, and their king, Alexander,
became head of the new state. Many
non-Serbs complained of being second-class
citizens, and in 1934, King Alexander was
assassinated by a Macedonian terrorist in the
service of the Croat Ustas a nationalist

organization while on a state visit to France.


In September 1939, World War II began, and
Yugoslavian leaders declared the country
neutral. They hoped to keep their state out of
the war, although Serb sentiment at least was
heavily pro-Allied. Serbs also dominated the
army officer corps. In late 1940, to counter
Russian moves and to solidify his flanks
before attacking the Soviet Union in Operation Barbarossa, German leader Adolf Hitler
forced the Balkan states to join the Axis
alliance.
Prince Paul (18931976), regent for the
young King Peter II (19231970), tried to
stall for time, but in March 1941, following
a meeting with Hitler at Berchtesgaden,
he concluded that resistance was futile

Yugoslavia in World War II

and might lead to the extermination of the


Yugoslav state. On March 25, Yugoslav
leaders traveled to Berlin to sign the Tripartite Pact. In taking this step, they hoped
they were preserving their countrys
independence; however, Serbian public
opinion was sharply opposed to the Axis
alliance. This opposition found expression
in nationwide demonstrations that prompted
a coup on March 27 by Yugoslav air force
officers, headed by General Dusan Simovic
(18821962). He ended the regency and
formed a new government under Peter II.
Although the new government assured the
Germans that there would be no immediate
change of course in Yugoslav foreign policy,
Hitler interpreted the coup as a personal
affront and planned a military reprisal.
Code-named Operation Retribution, the
reprisal began on April 6 and included
heavy air strikes against the Yugoslav
capital of Belgrade.
This Axis operation also involved troops
from Italy and Hungary (Hungarian premier
Pal Teleki (18791941) committed suicide
rather than dishonor himself by participating
in such an act), for a total of 52 Axis divisions. These units easily defeated Yugoslav
regular forces, overrunning the country in
only 11 days. The Yugoslav government
leaders and King Peter fled to London, arriving there in mid-June. Despite the poor performance of their armed forces, Yugoslav
leaders found themselves acclaimed as
heroes for having resisted Hitler. Soon, they
had established a government-in-exile.
Defeated, Yugoslavia was now partitioned
among the Axis states. Slovenia was divided
between Germany and Italy; Croatia and
Bosnia-Herzegovina were combined into
the independent state of Croatia under the
direction of the Fascist Ustas a government of Ante Pavelic (18891959); Italian
forces occupied the Dalmatian coast and

Montenegro; Albania annexed the Kosovo


region and Macedonia; Bulgaria received
Macedonia east of the Vardar River; Hungary took the Bachka and Baranya regions;
and Serbia and the Banat fell under German
military control.
All ethnic Croatians among the 300,000
Yugoslav prisoners of war taken in the invasion were freed, and by August 1941, the
Germans had established a Serb collaborationist government under General Milan
Nedic (18771946). In Croatia, meanwhile,
the fascist Ustasa began the mass murder of
minorities and forced Serbs to convert to
Catholicism from Orthodox Christianity. In
1941, these Croatian fascists killed at least
200,000 Serbs, Jews, and Gypsies, most of
them at the Jasenovac concentration camp.
Yugoslav resistance to the Germans began
immediately. Centered in the Serbs, it was
divided in two factions. Colonel Dragoljub
Draza Mihajlovic (18931946) retreated
with a small force to the mountains and set
etniks (named for Serb guerrillas
up the C
etniks
who had fought the Turks). The C
began receiving assistance from the British
Special Operations Executive (SOE) in
June 1941. Mihajlovic hoped to build up
his strength, avoiding reprisals by the
Germans against the civilian population,
and at the opportune time lead an uprising
against the Germans. He strongly supported
restoration of the monarchy.
Josip Broz (Tito) (18921980), leader of
the Yugoslav Communist Party since 1937,
headed the second major resistance group.
Known as the Partisans, the group favored
immediate attacks on the Germans regardless of the cost to the civilian population in
German reprisals. Following the German
invasion of the Soviet Union on June 22,
1941, the Wehrmacht redeployed all but
four of its divisions from Yugoslavia. Tito
capitalized on this situation, and the

349

350

Yugoslavia in World War II

Partisans were particularly active in Montenegro, Serbia, and Bosnia. By autumn


1941, Titos Partisans numbered 50,000 people and contested the Germans for control of
much of the countryside. In contrast to
Mihajlovic , Tito stressed a pan-Yugoslav
platform after the war, stressing participation of all ethnic groups and establishment
of a federated Yugoslav state.
Tito and Mihajlovic met on two separate
occasions in September and October 1941
but failed to develop a cooperative approach
against the Germans. Hostilities between
these two groups began in November 1941
when Cetniks attacked the Partisan base at
etniks often collaboUzice. Moreover, the C
rated with Italian troops and the Nedich
government in attempts to rid Serb and
Montenegrin areas of Partisan influence.
An agreement with German forces concluded on November 11 allowed the Cetniks
freedom of movement in return for taking
action against the Partisans.
The Partisans strength continued to grow.
During 1942, their numbers reached
100,000 people, and by 1943, they had
swelled to 250,000. By the end of the war,
Tito claimed nearly 800,000 followers.
So effective were their activities that the
Germans recalled their 113th Division from
the Eastern Front and the 342nd Division
from France to help contain the Partisans.
In addition, the Bulgarians maintained
8 divisions and the Italians 17 divisions on
Yugoslav territory. The Yugoslav resistance
is thus credited with tying down a large number of Axis troops who would otherwise have
been available for deployment elsewhere.
German forces mounted at least six major
anti-Partisan operations between 1941 and
1944, yet the chief consequence of these
sweeps was to force Tito to abandon any
fixed base of operations. German reprisals
against civilians, sometimes at the rate of

20 civilians killed for every dead German,


usually generated still greater Partisan support. By 1943, both the Nedic government
in Serbia and the Ustasa government in Croatia were unstable, and Titos strength had
grown to the point where he transformed
the Partisans into the National Liberation
Army of Yugoslavia. Also in 1943, Tito created a shadow Yugoslav provisional government known as the Anti-Fascist Council
for the Liberation of Yugoslavia (AVNOJ).
Located in Bosnia, the AVNOJ established
a network of district committees in Partisancontrolled areas of Croatia, Montenegro,
and Serbia.
The British continued to support
etniks until DecemMihajlovic and his C
ber 1943, when, falsely convinced by a
Communist agent that the Serb-dominated
etnik resistance group was not fighting
C
the Germans, Winston L. S. Churchills
government decided to channel all its aid to
the Partisans. On November 29, 1943, the
AVNOJ created the Yugoslav National
Liberation Committee as a shadow government. It banned King Peter from returning
to Yugoslavia and announced its intent to
create a postwar federated state.
When Italian troops surrendered in Yugoslavia on September 8, 1943, Titos force
seized the Italian arms depots. Faced with
surprisingly successful resistance movements in the hills of Serbia and Bosnia, the
Germans launched a number of operations,
two of the largest coming in 1943, in an
increasingly frustrated and futile attempt to
crush the Partisan movement. Accounts of
Partisan survival and heroism in the midst
of these assaults assumed mythic dimensions in postwar Yugoslavia.
When the Germans pulled out many of
their troops, the Partisans, largely recruited
from the peasantry, already held most of
the countryside and the main lines of

Yugoslav Military Coup

communication. In a coordinated effort


on October 20, 1944, the Soviet army and
Partisan forces moved into Belgrade. On
March 7, 1945, Titos provisional government
formally declared itself the legitimate leadership of the Federal Peoples Republic of
Yugoslavia. For Yugoslavia, the toll of World
War II had been heavy. By its end, an estimated 1.7 million Yugoslavs had been killed,
both in combat and in atrocities committed
by and against civilians.
At the end of the war, Yugoslavia attempted to annex Italian Istria and Trieste and the
southern provinces of Austria. Titos forces
moved into Carinthia and tried to take it by
coup de main. The speedy advance of the
British V Corps prevented this, but there
was a tense standoff. In mid-May 1945,
the threat of force finally convinced the
Yugoslavs to leave Austria. Clearly, Tito had
hoped to seize any area where there was a
blood tie to any ethnic group in Yugoslavia,
including Carinthia, Istria, and Slovenia.
Tito did exact vengeance on the Croats,
many of whom had been loyal to the Germans, as had many Slovenes. Within weeks
of the wars end, the Partisans executed
without trial up to a quarter of a million people who had sided with the Germans, most
of them Croats. In addition, the majority of
German prisoners taken in the war perished
in a long march of hate across Yugoslavia.
German soldiers captured in Yugoslavia
worked as slave laborers; 60 percent of
them were dead within a year. Also, despite
protests by Western governments, the new
Yugoslav government tried and executed
General Mihajlovic.
The fact that the Yugoslav resistance had
fought so well against the Germans and that
it had liberated most of the country placed
Tito in a strong position to demand and secure
a Red Army withdrawal from those parts of
Yugoslavia it occupied. In 1948, however,

Yugoslavia was expelled from the international Communist movement.


Neville Panthaki and Spencer C. Tucker
See also: C etniks; Mihajlovic , Dragoljub
Draza (18931946); Partisans, Yugoslavia;
Tito, Josip Broz (18921980); Yugoslavia,
Axis Occupation Forces in World War II;
Yugoslavia, Collaborationist Forces in World
War II; Yugoslavia, Invasion of, 1941

Further Reading
Clissold, S. Whirlwind: An Account of
Marshal Titos Rise to Power. New York:
Philosophical Library, 1949.
Cohen, Philip J. Serbias Secret War: Propaganda and the Deceit of History. College
Station: Texas A&M University Press,
1996.
Djilas, Milovan. Wartime. New York: Harcourt
Brace Jovanovich, 1980.
Roberts, Walter R. Tito, Mihailovic, and the
Allies, 19411945. New Brunswick, NJ:
Rutgers University Press, 1973.
Tomasevich, Jozo. War and Revolution in
Yugoslavia, 19411945: Occupation and
Collaboration. Stanford, CA: Stanford
University Press, 2001.
Trew, Simon. Britain, Mihailovic , and
the Chetniks, 19411942. New York: St.
Martins Press, 1998.

Yugoslav Military Coup


Yugoslav military officers led a coup that
overthrew the Yugoslav regent, Prince Paul
Karageorgevic (18931976), on March 27,
1941, and replaced him with his young
cousin, 17-year old King Peter II Karageorgevic (19231970), after Paul had signed a
military alliance with Nazi Germany in
Vienna two days earlier.
In fall 1940, Adolf Hitler directed the
German High Command to develop plans

351

352

Yugoslav Military Coup

for the invasion of the Soviet Union. On


December 5, Hitler approved the invasion
plans and, on December 18, signed the war
directive that authorized the invasion, codenamed Operation Barbarossa, to begin on
May 15, 1941. Hitler then began negotiations
with Romania and Bulgaria to secure the
southern flank of the proposed offensive
against a possible attack by the British from
the south and to protect the vital Romanian
oilfields. Romania formally joined the Axis
on November 23, 1940, with German promises to return the provinces of Bessarabia and
northern Bukovina, which Hitler had forced
Romania to cede to the Soviet Union in
August 1939. On March 1, 1941, Bulgaria
joined the Axis in exchange for promises
to receive the Macedonian provinces of
Yugoslavia and Greece.
Italys invasion of Greece from Albania
that began on October 28, 1940, complicated the situation in the Balkans. Although
the Italian army initially performed well
and drove through the Greek defenses, the
Italian advance stalled in muddy and mountainous terrain after two weeks of fighting.
The Greek army went on the offensive and
drove the Italians back to the Albanian border by the end of January 1941. Hitler now
felt that he had to prevent the complete
defeat of the Italians and the humiliation of
his Axis partner, Benito Mussolini.
In the meantime, Hitler pressured Prince
Paul, who hoped to keep Yugoslavia out of
the war, into signing the Tripartite Treaty in
Vienna on March 25, 1941. News of the official signing of the treaty produced anti-Nazi
demonstrations in Belgrade, the Yugoslav
capital. When Paul returned to Belgrade
two days later, senior military officers
led by the air forces Brigadier General
Borivoje Mirkovic (18841969), opposed
to the treaty and encouraged by anti-Nazi
opposition parties and promises from

Britain, arrested the three members of the


regencyPrince Paul, Dr. Radenko Stankovic (18801956), and Dr. Ivo Perovic
(18821958); the premier, Dragis a Cvetkovic (18931969); and the vice prime
minister, Vlatko Macek (18791964). The
conspirators exiled Paul and installed Peter
II as king with full powers; General Dusan
Simovic (18821962), the commander of
the air force, as the prime minister; and
Slobodan Jovanovic (18691958) as the
deputy prime minister.
Upon hearing the news of the coup in
Belgrade, Hitler took it as a personal insult,
went into a rage, and ordered the High
Command to develop a plan to invade
Yugoslavia. The invasion began on April 6,
1941, with a devastating aerial attack on
Belgrade. The Yugoslav army collapsed on
April 17. Also on April 6, the Germans
invaded Greece and completely occupied
that country by June 1, 1941. Some historians contend that these actions delayed the
invasion of the Soviet Union until June 22,
which meant that Hitlers armies bogged
down in approaching winter weather in
October, about 100 miles west of Moscow.
Robert B. Kane
See also: Germany in the Balkans during
World War II; Greece, Invasion of, 1941;
Yugoslavia, Invasion of, 1941

Further Reading
Costa, Nicholas J. Shattered Illusions: Albania, Greece and Yugoslavia. Boulder, CO:
East European Monographs, 1998.
Hopner, Jacob B. Yugoslavia in Crisis, 1934
1941. New York: Columbia University
Press, 1962.
Jelavich, Barbara. History of the Balkans. 2
vols. Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 1983.
Pavlowitch, Stevan K. The Improbable
Survivor: Yugoslavia and Its Problems,

Yugoslav-Soviet Split
19181988. Columbus: Ohio State University Press, 1988.

Yugoslav Overflight
Incidents, 1946
The Yugoslav overflight incidents were a
series of confrontations over Yugoslav air
space during the early Cold War. In 1946,
the new Yugoslav Communist government
headed by Josip Broz Tito (18921980)
interdicted several American flights that
had crossed into Yugoslav territory. The
Yugoslavs forced down one British aircraft
and shot down two American planes. Having assumed control by military victory in
1945, Tito wanted to demonstrate to the
Soviets his commitment to Communism.
This led him to engage in a dispute over
the disposition of the Italian Adriatic port
of Trieste. This also caused the Yugoslavs
to assume an aggressive posture toward the
Americans and their allies. In 1946, a
Yugoslav Air Force Yak-3 had forced down
a Royal Air Force Dakota transport plane
near Nis (Serbia). No one was injured
in this incident. On August 9, 1946, the
Yugoslav Air Force operating from
Ljubljana shot at an American C-47 flying
over northern Yugoslav (Slovenia) air space
land and made it land. One passenger was
severely wounded in the incident. Ten days
later, on August 19, a Yugoslav Air Force
Yak-3 fighter plane, also from Ljubljana,
shot down another American C-47 over
northern Yugoslavia (Slovenia), killing the
entire five-man crew. The American flights
were apparently unauthorized efforts by the
individual crews to save time in flying from
Vienna to Venice and Rome. The Yugoslavs
evidently perceived these intrusions as a
part of a hostile American effort directed
against the Yugoslav Communist govern-

ment. They probably thought the transport


planes were bombers. Neither side chose to
escalate the conflict. The Yugoslavs released
the airmen from the first plane and paid
compensation to the families of the airmen
in the second plane. Tensions between the
Americans and Yugoslavs eased in 1948 as
Tito split with his Soviet allies.
This did not entirely end such overflight
incidents, however. On October 27, 1948,
an Italian Air Force P-38 Lightning was
shot down over Yugoslavia. Then on October 13, 1951, another Italian Air Force
P-38L Lightning was shot down over
Yugoslavia. Only with the final resolution
of the Trieste issue in 1954 did Yugoslavias
aggressive defense of their air space against
intrusion from the West come to an end.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Cold War in the Balkans; Tito, Josip
Broz (18921980); Trieste Dispute; YugoslavSoviet Split

Further Reading
Intrusions, Overflights, Shootdowns and
Defections during the Cold War and Thereafter. http://myplace.frontier.com/~anneled/
ColdWar.html.
Lampe, John. Yugoslavia as History: Twice
There Was a Country. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996.

Yugoslav-Soviet Split
This 1948 rupture between Yugoslavia and
the Soviet Union stemmed, in large measure, from personal and geopolitical conflict
between Stalin and Tito. Following World
War II, Yugoslavia, under the leadership of
Partisan resistance hero Josip Broz Tito,
was the Soviet Unions most ardent ally in
Eastern Europe. The Yugoslavs even
became embroiled in disputes with the

353

354

Yugoslav-Soviet Split

Americans over the disposition of Trieste


and Yugoslav attacks on American aircraft.
Both Yugoslavia and the Soviet Union held
similar attitudes toward Albanian developments. The Yugoslavs initially decided to
subordinate their foreign policy objectives
to Moscow by seeking Soviet approval and
support for Belgrades expansionist objectives toward Albania. Stalin indicated
that Yugoslavia might swallow Albania.
Moscows interests, though, transcended
bilateral Soviet-Yugoslav relations and
stressed combating what they saw as a
permanent U.S. commitment to Western
Europe demonstrated by the Marshall Plan.
Stalin sought to reinforce Soviet dominance of the Communist bloc by demanding
subservience of all Eastern Europe Communist regimes. He became suspicious of Titos
efforts to establish a Balkan Federation
including Albania, Bulgaria, and Yugoslavia. The Yugoslavs, however, resented
Soviet efforts to dominate their economy
and military. In particular they, having won
their war against Nazi Germany, disliked
receiving the same treatment from the
Soviets accorded to former Nazi allies Bulgaria and Romania. Tito and the Yugoslavs
refused to submit to the Soviet definition of
Socialist Internationalism.
On June 28, 1948, the date recalling the
Battle of Kosovo in 1389 and the assassination of Archduke Francis Ferdinand (1863
1914) in 1914, the Yugoslav Communist
Party was expelled from Cominform, the
international Communist organization. As a
result, Albania, a Yugoslav satellite since
1945, broke away from Belgrades control
and sought support from Moscow. Also, the
Yugoslavs discontinued their support for the
Greek Communist rebels. The Greek Civil
War ended the next year. Finally Titos
government adopted a policy of nonalignment
in international relations. Yugoslavia joined

neither NATO and the European Common


Market, nor COMECON and the Warsaw
Pact. It did briefly enter into a Balkan Pact
with Greece and Turkey in 1954, but this
agreement proved to be ephemeral. It also formulated an economic model that included
workers self-management, permitted the
emigration of labor to Western European
countries, and encouraged foreign tourism.
After Stalins death, bilateral relations
were restored between the Soviet Union
and Yugoslavia. Nevertheless, the Yugoslavs
maintained their distance. This ideological
split to some degree precluded further Communist advancement in Eastern Europe.
Even though Stalin had threatened that he
would lift his little finger and destroy Tito,
Yugoslav national interests were able to survive until its national disintegration in the
early 1990s. This was in part because Stalin
did not wish to expend the military effort to
subdue Tito and his successors when he
had other global interests to attend to.
Bert Chapman
See also: Balkan Pact, 1954; Hoxha, Enver
(19081985); NATO in the Balkans; Tito,
Josip Broz (18921980); Truman Doctrine;
Yugoslav Overflight Incidents, 1946

Further Reading
Djilas, Milovan. Tito: The Story from Inside.
London: Phoenix Press, 2000.
Majstorovic, Vojin. The Rise and Fall of the
Yugoslav-Soviet Alliance, 19451948.
Past Imperfect 16 (2010): 13264.
Pons, Silvio. Stalin and the European
Communists after World War Two (1943
1948). Past & Present (January 2011,
supplement 6): 12138.
U.S. Central Intelligence Agency. National
Foreign Assessment Center. Key SovietYugoslav Documents: A Reference Aid.
Washington, DC: Central Intelligence
Agency, 1980. http://hdl.handle.net/2027/
mdp.39015054429413.

Yugoslav Wars, 19911995

Yugoslav Wars, 19911995


The Yugoslav Wars were conflicts resulting
from years of increasing ethnic antagonism
in the former nation of Yugoslavia. The outbreak of hostilities was precipitated by the
death of Communist leader Josip Broz Tito
(18921980) in 1980 and the subsequent
collapse of the Cold War and communism.
Under Titos regime, small-scale ethnic
clashes and religious rivalries were quickly
and forcefully suppressed. Following Titos
death, a nationalistic movement supplanted
the League of Communists in Yugoslavia,
and Slobodan Milos evic (19412006)
gained power. On May 8, 1989, Milosevic
was elected president of Serbia. He soon
established control over the autonomous
regions of Kosovo and Vojvodina. Together
with control of Montenegro, this gave him
effective domination of the eight-member
Yugoslav executive council established as
an executive body after Titos death in
1980. As it became clear that Milos evic
was intent on Serbian authority over the
entire region, Croatia and Slovenia declared
their independence from Yugoslavia on
June 25, 1991. Consequently, the Bosnian
Serbs, led by Milos evic and Radovan
Karadzic (1945), launched a campaign of
ethnic cleansing against the Muslim and
Croat population.
On June 27, 1991, the Yugoslav Peoples
Army (JNA) failed to quell the insurgent
Slovenian forces with tank and infantry
assaults. About the same time, fighting
began between Croats and local Serbs in
the Krajina region of Croatia. Slovenias
war for independence lasted only a month,
with fewer than 70 deaths reported; Milosevic decided to cut his losses in Slovenia.
In any event, Slovenia did not contain a
significant Serbian population. Croatia,

however, was different. Around 12 percent


of the population of Croatia was Serbian. Croatian secessionist forces pitted against Serb
rebels (supported by the JNA) continued
fighting for another six months with roughly
10,000 reported deaths. On December 19,
1991, rebel Serbs declared independence in
the Krajina region, which constituted almost
a third of Croatia. On November 17, 1991,
the besieged town of Vukovar in eastern Croatia fell to Croatian Serb and JNA forces. In
the aftermath the victors massacred civilians
and wounded Croat soldiers.
On January 3, 1992, the United Nations
successfully brokered a cease-fire agreement between the Croatian government
and rebel Serbs. After many subsequent
breaches, the UN Protection Force installed
14,000 peacekeeping troops in Croatia.
That installation was eventually expanded
to include help in the delivery of humanitarian aid for those affected by the ongoing
hostilities.
The fighting then shifted to Bosnia. On
December 21, local Serb leaders in Bosnia
and Herzegovina declared a new republic
independent from Bosnia. On March 3, the
Bosnian Muslim and Croat population
voted for independence in a referendum
denounced by Bosnian Serbs.
On April 6, 1992, Bosnian Serbs
attempted to seize possession of Bosnias
capital city of Sarajevo. War broke out
between Bosnian government forces and
the rebel Serbs, and war ensued. The Bosnian Serb attack on Sarajevo failed due to
the resistance of the mainly Muslim (Bosniak) Bosnian government forces. The Bosnian Serbs then imposed a siege from the
hills around Sarajevo. In May, UN sanctions
were implemented against Serbia for support of rebel Serbs in Croatia and Bosnia.
As heavy fighting continued throughout

355

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Yugoslav Wars, 19911995

Bosnian government forces point guns at the Holiday Inn in Sarajevo, Bosnia and
Herzegovina, on April 6, 1992, after a crowd of tens of thousands of peace protesters
came under sniper fire from the hotel windows in Sarajevo. Five people were killed, and
police reportedly arrested six Serb gunmen. (AP Photo/Tanjug)

January 1993, the Serbian rebel siege of


Sarajevo continued. The United Nations
and European Union peace negotiations
failed while war broke out in Bosnia once
morethis time between Muslims and
Croats, who fought over the remaining
30 percent of Bosnia not already claimed
by the Bosnian Serbs. On April 13, 1993,
the North Atlantic Treaty Organization
(NATO) began air patrols over Bosnia to
enforce a UN ban on flights in the region.
On February 6, 1994, Serbian rebels
shelled Sarajevos central marketplace,
killing 68 people. In retaliation, NATO jets
shot down four Serbian aircraft as hostilities
continued to escalate in the region. This
marked the first time that NATO had
used force since its inception in 1949.
On March 18, 1994, Bosnian Muslims
and Croats signed a U.S.-brokered peace

agreement. On April 10, NATO launched


its first air strikes against the Serbs in
Banja Luka.
Bosnian Serbs and the Bosnian government signed a truce facilitated by former
U.S. president Jimmy Carter on January 1,
1995. However, when the agreement expired four months later, the Muslim-led
government refused to renew the terms, and
fighting escalated once more. Serbs continued to assail Sarajevo, while on May 26,
1995, NATO air strikes created a crisis situation in which 350 UN peacekeepers were
taken hostage by Bosnian Serbs. The Serbian government (in a bid to improve
relations with the West) helped to arrange
the hostages release. The massacre of
8,000 Bosniak men and boys after Bosnian
Serb forces led by Ratko Mladic (1942)
overran Srebrenica on July 11, 1995,

Yugoslav Wars, 19911995

provided added incentive for the resolution


of the fighting. In Operation Storm,
launched on August 4, 1995, U.S.-trained
Croat forces undertook the offensive against
the Croatian Serb army in the Krajina. The
Croats rapidly overran the Serbian positions.
In the aftermath of this operation, most of
the Serbian population left or was expelled
from the Krajina, where it had lived since
the beginning of the eighteenth century.
Then on August 28, NATO launched a massive bombing campaign on Bosnian Serb
positions. This enabled Croat and Bosniak
forces to proceed against the Bosnian
Serbs. By September 21, 1995, the Croats
and Bosniaks had taken about half of
Bosnia. Both sides were exhausted and
ready to talk.
Hosted by the United States, peace talks
began on November 1, 1995, near the
Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Dayton,
Ohio, at the Begrime Conference Center.
While Serbian president Milosevic claimed
support for the peace talks, Serbian general
Mladic proclaimed that he would fight the
terms of the forthcoming peace accord. As
the talks continued, the first NATO peacekeeping troops arrived in Sarajevo.
On December 14, the Dayton Agreement
(1995) was signed in Paris, France. The
terms of the agreement granted 51 percent
of Bosnia to the Bosnian-Croat federation
and 49 percent to the Serbs. While this
agreement officially ended the war, as
Serbs withdrew occupation forces in the
region granted to the Bosnian-Croat federation, they destroyed what little was left
intact in the aftermath of the conflict, and
sporadic fighting continued.Fighting then
erupted in Kosovo in 1998. A collapse of
Albanian government authority in 1997 led
to the looting of stores of Albanian army
weapons and munitions. The next year, the
Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) made use

of these weapons against Serbian authorities


in Kosovo. The Serbs responded with brutality. NATO undertook a bombing campaign
against the Serbs in February 1999. In
response, in Operation Horseshoe, the
Serbs attempted to force much of the Albanian population out of Kosovo. Finally, on
June 10, 1999, the Serbs agreed to withdraw
from Kosovo. NATO forces assumed
responsibility for the country.
Following a U.S. bombing of Kosovo in
1999 and the winding down of the war,
Milosevic remained in power despite being
declared a war criminal. Finally brought to
justice in the year 2000, Milosevic s trial
began at The Hague on September 26,
2002. He died of an apparent heart attack
on March 11, 2006, before a verdict could
be rendered. As of this writing, two other
war criminals awaited justice in The
Hague: Radovan Karadz ic , captured on
July 26, 2008; and Ratko Mladic, apprehended by Serbian authorities on May 26,
2011. On February 17, 2008, Kosovo
declared its independence from Serbia.
While most European states and the United
States recognized this, Serbia and Russia
have not. A NATO force remains in the
country.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Bosnian War, 19921995; Dayton
Peace Accords, 1995; Kosovo War, 1998
1999; NATO in the Balkans; Srebrinica
Massacre, 1995; Vance-Owen Plan, 1993;
Yugoslav Wars, 19911995, Causes; Yugoslav
Wars, 19911995, Consequences

Further Reading
Magas, Branka. The Destruction of Yugoslavia: Tracking the Breakup 19801992.
New York: Verso, 1993.
Rogel, Carole. The Breakup of Yugoslavia and
the War in Bosnia. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1998.

357

358

Yugoslav Wars, 19911995, Causes


Silber, Laura, and Allen Little. Yugoslavia:
Death of a Nation. New York: Penguin,
1998.
U.S. Central Intelligence Agency. Balkan
Battlefields: A Military History of the Yugoslav Conflict 19901995. Washington DC:
Central Intelligence Agency, 2002.

Yugoslav Wars, 19911995,


Causes
The causes of the Yugoslav Wars began in
the formation of the first Yugoslav state in
1918. The Kingdom of the Serbs, Croats,
and Slovenes that emerged at the end of
World War I had a plurality of Serbs scattered throughout much of its territory.
These included the population of the Kingdoms of Serbia and Montenegro as well as
the Serbian populations of Bosnia and
Croatia.
Many of these Serbs regarded the new
state as theirs by right of their sacrifices
made during the war against the Central
Powers. The assertion of Serbian authority
and rights often came at the expense of the
non-Serbian population. Many Bosniaks
(Bosnian Muslims), Croats, and Slovenes
had served in the Austro-Hungarian army
during the war, and thus were regarded as
former enemies by the Serbs. Serbian domination belied the ideal of Yugoslavism,
which regarded all South Slavs as being
essentially the same people. Serbs held leading positions in the government, military,
and police. The monarch was from the
Serbian Karageorgevic dynasty. To emphasize the dominant position of the Serbs, the
constitution of the new state, essentially an
updated version of the Serbian Constitution of 1903, was enacted on Vidovdan
(St. Vitus Day), June 28, 1921, the Serbian
national holiday and the seventh anniversary

of the Sarajevo assassination. The predominance of the Serbs in the government alienated much of the non-Serbian populations.
The Croats, who constituted the secondlargest element in the population, were
especially disaffected. King Alexander
(18881934) attempted to denationalize the
country in 1929 by redrawing the borders
of administrative districts to vary the population and adopted the name Yugoslavia for
the country. This had little effect. Nor did
the 1939 Sporzum, which granted the Croatian parts of the country some autonomy,
alleviate the problem.
The German and Italian attack on
Yugoslavia in April 1941 demonstrated
how deep the divisions among the Yugoslav
nationalities had become. Most Serbian
units in the Yugoslav armed forces resisted
the invaders; many Croatian units did
not. Yugoslavia dissolved into a Germansponsored Croatian state (NDH) and a
German-sponsored Serbian state. Bulgarian,
German, Hungarian, and Italian forces occupied the rest of the country. The atrocities of
the ruling party in the NDH, the Ustas a,
directed against the Serbian populations of
Bosnia and Croatia, soon led to Serbian resistance. At the same time, mainly Serbian
units of the Royal Yugoslav Army bypassed
during the invasion coalesced with local
Serbs in Bosnia and Croatia into a force
known as the C etniks. A nonnationalist
resistance force led by Josip Broz Tito
(18921980) and the Yugoslav Communist
Party known as the Partisans became active
after the German invasion of the Soviet
Union on June 22, 1941. A multisided civil
war ensued among the C etniks, Partisans,
and Ustasa. Adding another dimension to
the fighting were occupation forces. Smaller
units of various originsincluding Montenegrin nationalists (Greens), Slovene Home
Guards, Kosovo Albanian units, and even a

Yugoslav Wars, 19911995, Causes

Russian Cossack unitparticipated in the


general chaos. While fighting occurred
throughout the country, the epicenter of the
conflict was Bosnia, which was nominally a
part of the NDH. There, all sides committed
horrific atrocities, and all sides suffered considerable military and civilian casualties.
The surrender of the Italians in September 1943 and the withdrawal of the Germans
in the fall of 1944 left the Partisans to dominate Yugoslavia. The NDH held on until
May 9, becoming the last of the German
European allies in World War II to fall.
Vengeful Partisans pursued the remnants of
the Cetniks, Ustasa, and others, massacring
around 70,000 of them near Bleiburg in
southern Austria. A legacy of nationalist
hatred remained.
After the war, the new Communist regime
sought to erase the nationalist legacy.
This meant the imposition of communist
ideology in place of nationalism. This also
meant the establishment of a federal
government, with six republics: Serbia,
Croatia, Slovenia, Bosnia-Herzegovina,
Macedonia, and Montenegro. The Tito
regime also carved out two autonomous
regionsKosovo, with a predominately
Albanian population, and Vojvodina, with a
mixed populationout of Serbian territory.
They were intended to some degree to dilute
Serbian influence and prevent Serbian domination of the new Yugoslavia. Overt expressions of nationalism were forbidden in this
second Yugoslavia. The Tito regime succeeded to some degree in developing and
maintaining the idea of Yugoslavia as an independent Communist state. Only in 1971
did Croatian intellectuals attempt to emphasize their particularism. The regime soon
suppressed this Croatian Spring. This incident demonstrated that nationalist sensibilities, although muted, remained exeunt in
Titos Yugoslavia.

Titos death in May 1980 began the


revival of nationalism and, with it, the
slow unraveling of the second Yugoslavia.
Several problems beset the post-Tito
government. In place of the dictatorial leadership of Tito was a council consisting of the
presidents of the six republics and two
autonomous regions. Chairmanship of this
council rotated on a yearly basis. This
arrangement precluded the rapid and decisive exercise of executive power. During
the 1980s, the Yugoslav economy foundered. The cost of imported gas and oil
soared. Yugoslav production faltered. One
well-known failure was the Yugo, a cheap
car exported to the United States. Without
the adequate repair and supply infrastructure
to maintain it, exports plummeted. Another
problem for the country was the 1989 failure
of communism throughout Eastern Europe.
This brought the validity of the ruling ideology in Yugoslavia into question.
As the post-Tito Yugoslavia faced
economic and political crises, nationalism
reemerged. Soon after Titos death, the
majority Albanian population of Kosovo
began to raise demands for the elevation of
their autonomous region to the status of
republic. Under Tito, the Kosovo Albanians
had achieved important economic and political gains in Kosovo. Serbs, however, had
long regarded Kosovo as the heartland of
their nationalist mythology. Even though by
1980 they were in the distinct minority,
they considered Kosovo to be an important
part of their identity. They perceived the
demands of the Kosovo Albanians for a
republic as a threat to Serbian identity.
Although federal authorities quashed the
demands for a Kosovo republic in 1981,
many Serbs remained concerned that their
domination of that region was in peril. In
1986, a group from the Serbian Academy
of Sciences published a memorandum that

359

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Yugoslav Wars, 19911995, Consequences

claimed that the Serbian population of


Kosovo and Croatia was under threat of
extermination. The rhetoric grew even
more extreme the next year, when a Communist Party official from Serbia, Slobodan
Milos evic (19412006), told a Serbian
crowd in Kosovo that no one [meaning
the Kosovo Albanian police] should dare
to beat you. He implied that the Yugoslav
government was then replacing the
Tito-era consideration for the Kosovo
Albanians with the restoration of Serbian
privilege in Kosovo. This performance
elevated Milosevic to the leadership of the
Serbian nationalists. For him, Serbian
nationalism became a vehicle to Yugoslav
political power.
By 1989, Milosevic had taken over control of the Serbian Communist Party. That
same year, he ousted the leaders of the Communist Parties of Kosovo and Vojvodina and
installed his allies in their places. This gave
him control of three seats in the rotating
presidency, together with the ready acquiescence of Montenegro. With four presidential
seats under Milosevics power, the specter of
a Serbian-ruled Yugoslavia appeared again.
This was unacceptable to the Croats and
Slovenes. These two republics also resented
that their greater economic prosperity
helped to fund Serbian political power
through the federal system. They both
declared their independence on June 25,
1991. After a short war, the Slovenes
achieved recognition from Belgrade. The independent Croatian state under the strong
nationalist Franjo Tudjman (19221999)
soon revived symbols associated with the
NDH and the Ustasa, such as the checkerboard shield (sahovnica), and fired Serbs
from government positions in Croatia.
These actions greatly increased the nationalist anxieties of Serbs living in Croatia and
Bosnia. They remembered the horrible

events of World War II. These Serbian communities responded by reviving self-defense
organizations based on Cetnik models.
The situation exploded in Croatia in 1991
as the Zagreb government sought to enforce
its authority in Serbian-inhabited areas. War
ensued in the Serbian-inhabited areas of
central and eastern Croatia. It blew up in
Bosnia in the spring of 1992 after the Bosniak and Croat populations voted to establish an independent Bosnian state, rather
than remain in a Serbian-dominated Yugoslavia. These wars persisted until 1995. In
1999, conflict also came to Kosovo.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Bosnian War, 19921995; Milosevic, Slobodan (19412006); Sarajevo, Siege
of, 19921995; Srebrenica Massacre, 1995;
Yugoslav Wars, 19911995; Yugoslav Wars,
19911995, Consequences

Further Reading
Magas, Branka. The Destruction of Yugoslavia: Tracking the Breakup 19801992.
New York: Verso, 1993.
Rogel, Carole. The Breakup of Yugoslavia and
the War in Bosnia. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1998.
Silber, Laura, and Allen Little. Yugoslavia:
Death of a Nation. New York: Penguin, 1998.

Yugoslav Wars, 19911995,


Consequences
The Yugoslav Wars were a series of horrific
disasters for the people living there. These
conflicts tore apart what had been a stable
and even at times prosperous country. Prewar Yugoslavia had even achieved sufficient
international acclaim to successfully host
the 1984 Winter Olympics. The cost in
lives for the wars remains unclear. At least
200,000 people died. Hundreds of thousands

Yugoslav Wars, 19911995, Consequences

more were displaced from their homes. In


addition, uncounted numbers of people suffered from deprivation, psychological problems, and rape. Much of Bosnia especially
sustained great material damage. Finally,
the concept of Yugoslavism, which emphasized the essential cultural and political
unity of the South Slavic peoples of southeastern Europe, suffered a blow from which
it is unlikely to soon recover.
The death, devastation, and displacement
caused by the fighting did not affect the
lands of Yugoslavia evenly. The most grievously distressed region was BosniaHerzegovina. Before 1991, this republic
was the most ethnically diverse of all the
Yugoslav republics, with about 44 percent
Bosniaks (Muslim Slavs), 31 percent Serbs,
and 17 percent Croats. It also had the highest
percentage of self- professed Yugoslavs of
any republic. Before the war, this population
was distributed fairly evenly throughout
Bosnia. Around 150,000 Bosnians died in
the war, although any casualty figures lack
precision. The majority of these victims
were Bosniaks.
One of the most horrific instances of loss
of life occurred during the first two weeks
of July 1995 at Srebrenica. There, Serbian
forces under the command of Ratko Mladic
(1942) massacred around 8,000 Bosniak
men and boys. Much infrastructure was also
destroyed in the fighting, including many
mosques and Catholic and Orthodox
churches. The famous Old Bridge (Stari
Most) in Mostar was also ruined, although it
has since been rebuilt. Among the casualties
was the concept of a multinational Bosnia.
The ethnic cleansing carried out by all
sides, especially the Serbs, has concentrated the Bosniak, Croat, and Serbian
populations in their own ethnic enclaves.
It has also increased the Muslim, Catholic,
and Orthodox identities of these groups. The

division of Bosnia into a Bosniak-Croat


federation and a Serbian Republic by the
Dayton Peace Accords of 1995 is unlikely to
overcome these differences anytime soon. As
a result, the federal Bosnian state with its
two components is unlikely to gain economic
and political stability. Any inclusion in wider
European organizations such as the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) or the
European Union (EU) remains only a remote
possibility. An EU military force remains in
Bosnia to enforce the peace.
Another area that endured significant
death and destruction from the Yugoslav
Wars was Croatia. Here, the losses were
confined to three distinct areas. In the southwest, the medieval city of Dubrovnik suffered considerable material damage while
blockaded by Serbian and Montenegrin
forces in the fall of 1991. In eastern Croatia
(Slavonia) during the same time, the city of
Vukovar endured many civilian and military
casualties while under siege by the Serbs.
Many of its buildings were destroyed in
the fighting. The Serbs massacred many
survivors when they took the city on November 18, 1991. Most of the consequences for
Croatia occurred in the traditional Serbian
areas known as the Krajina. Serbs had
settled this area as a part of the Habsburg
Military Frontier in the early eighteenth century. They constituted around 12 percent of
the population of the Croatian republic.
During Operation Storm in August 1995,
most of the Serbian civilian population fled
from their homes or were driven out by the
Croatian army into the Serbian-held areas of
Bosnia and Serbia itself. The 200-year-old
presence of Serbs in south-central Croatia
was ended in a week. The independent Croatian state became much less ethnically
diverse. For some time after 1995, Croatia
remained something of an international pariah
because of the ethnic cleansing. Only after the

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Yugoslav Wars, 19911995, Consequences

death of wartime leader Franjo Tudjman in


1999 did Croatia begin to seek to restrain its
nationalist self-righteousness. It began to
detain internationally indicted war criminals
and sought inclusion in European organizations. Croatia joined NATO in 2009 and
entered the EU in 2013.
The outbreak of fighting in Yugoslavia in
1991 raised hopes in Kosovo that Serbian
rule might come to an end. An underground
Kosovo assembly proclaimed independence
in the fall of 1991, but the presence of
Serbian security forces prevented any
action. Resentment over the failure of the
Dayton Peace Accords to address the
Kosovo issue helped to revive the Albanian
cause. At the same time, the Serbian
government, under the pressure of the losses
in Bosnia and Croatia, became more determined than ever to retain Kosovo. The repetition of the same tactics of brutality
toward the civilian population and ethnic
cleansing the Serbs had employed in Bosnia
helped to focus the sympathies of the outside world on the Kosovo Albanians.
As a result, NATO intervened and carried
out a bombing campaign against Serbia.
This caused considerable destruction and
some loss of life. After the Serbs withdrew
from Kosovo, NATO assumed control
there. Kosovo remained under UN control
from 1999 until its unilateral declaration of
independence in 2008.
The efforts that Slobodan Milos evic
(19412006) took in 1999 to ensure Serbian
control of Kosovo and Yugoslavia ended in
the loss of Serbian control of both. The
actions and atrocities committed by some Serbian groups during the fighting in Bosnia and
Croatia cast a shadow of international opprobrium. The behavior of Serbian forces in
Kosovo did little to alleviate these impressions. After the separation of Kosovo in
2008, Serbia was reduced to little more than

the pre-1912 state plus Vojvodina, which


remains nominally autonomous. With the
election of a pro-European government in
2008, the Serbs finally began to seek out internationally indicted war criminals as a preliminary step to an application to the EU.
For Macedonia, the consequences of the
Yugoslav Wars were mixed. Macedonia
declared independence from Yugoslavia on
September 8, 1991. While no Yugoslav
component challenged this, two problems
did confront the new state. The Greeks
objected to the name of the state and its use
of certain symbols. They considered the
name Macedonia as a provocation indicating
designs on the northern Greek province
of the same name. As a result, the Greeks
obstructed Macedonian admission to
international bodies such as NATO. The
other problem concerned the status of the
Albanian minority within the new state.
The Albanians, who constitute around a
quarter of the population, were emboldened
by the Albanian success in Kosovo to seek
greater access to economic and political
power in Macedonia. A brief war ensued in
2001. NATO peacekeepers enforced a ceasefire. As of this writing, EU peacekeepers
remained there. Because of Greek embargoes,
economic development still lags in Macedonia. Macedonia achieved a precarious independence but neither international acceptance
nor internal stability.
Montenegro and Slovenia actually benefited from the collapse of Yugoslavia. At
first Montenegro, the smallest of the Yugoslav republics, sided with Serbia in the
wars. In April 1992, Montenegro and Serbia
declared themselves the components of a
new Yugoslav federation. Montenegrin
enthusiasm for the war and the new Yugoslavia waned, however, as the fighting
dragged on and as EU investment money
became available. Montenegros Adriatic

Yugoslav Wars, 19911995, Consequences

Coast attracted much foreign interest.


NATOs bombing campaign in 1999 hit
some Montenegrin targets and further
eroded the ties between Montenegro and
Serbia. In 2003, a looser union between
Serbia and Montenegro replaced Yugoslavia.
In 2006, Montenegrins voted for independence. With the declaration of independence
on June 3, 2006, for the first time since
1918, an independent Montenegrin government ruled the country. The coastline of the
country has sustained extensive development.
The country seeks admission to the EU and
NATO. The smallest Yugoslav republic has
gained some prosperity along with its restored
independence.
The biggest winner in the Yugoslav Wars
was Slovenia. The most developed republic
of Titos Yugoslavia fought a brief war in
August 1991 against the Yugoslav army.
At a low cost in lives and material, the
Slovenes preserved the independence they
had declared on June 25, 1991. After the
withdrawal of federal forces, Slovenia maintained a distance from events in the rest of
Yugoslavia. Slovenia established good commercial and political relations with the rest
of Europe. In 2004, Slovenia became the
first of the former Yugoslav republics to
join both NATO and the EU.
The Yugoslav Wars were a horrible
tragedy for most of the former state of
Yugoslavia. The exact number of dead and
displaced will probably never be clear, but
perhaps 200,000 citizens of the state

perished as it fell apart. At least 2.5 million


people were internal or external refugees.
The trauma inflicted on the survivors in Bosnia and Croatia will endure for a long time.
For Serbia, these wars meant physical
destruction, territorial retreat, and international humiliation. Everywhere, the concept of Yugoslavism was also a casualty.
Cultural, economic, and political unity in
southeastern Europe will now likely only
occur in the context of a greater European
union. Ironically, for Montenegro, the wars
meant the restoration of independence lost
in 1918. For Kosovo and Macedonia, the
collapse of Yugoslavia led to political
independence for the first time in their histories. For Slovenia, they opened a new era
of political independence and economic
development.
Richard C. Hall
See also: Bosnian War, 19921995; Milosevic, Slobodan (19412006); Sarajevo, Siege
of, 19921995; Srebrenica Massacre, 1995;
Yugoslav Wars, 19911995; Yugoslav Wars,
19911995, Causes

Further Reading
Benson, Leslie. Yugoslavia: A Concise History. New York: Palgrave, 2001.
Philips, John. Macedonia: Warlords and
Rebels in the Balkans. New Haven, CT:
Yale University Press, 2004.
Sell, Louis. Slobodan Milosevic and the
Destruction of Yugoslavia. Durham, NC:
Duke University Press, 2002.

363

Z
Zhekov, Nikola (18641949)

In 1917, Zhekov became involved in


a plot to oust Bulgarian Premier Vasil
Radoslavov (18541929). The Bulgarian
military was then experiencing serious military shortages, and it was clear the Central
Powers were losing the war. During the battle of Dobro Pole in September 1918, Zhekov was in Vienna seeking treatment for a
medical condition. He was thus not on hand
to direct his forces when they suffered the
defeat that knocked Bulgaria out of the war.
With a Bulgarian military defeat imminent, Zhekov fled to Germany. In 1923, he
returned to Bulgaria to defend his actions
during the war, but he was promptly imprisoned. Granted amnesty after serving three
years in prison, Zhekov later espoused
fascist ideals and led a pro-German group
in Bulgaria. Although he was granted a
German pension, Adolf Hitler refused to
install him in power. Zhekov left Bulgaria
at the end World War II and died at Fussen,
Germany, on October 6, 1949.
Brian C. Trueblood

Bulgarian army general, later commander in


chief of the army, Nikola Todorov Zhekov
was born on December 25, 1864, at Silven
in eastern Bulgaria. Zhekov graduated from
the military academy in Sofia and fought in
Bulgarias 1885 war against Serbia. Zhekov
received advanced training in Italy and then
commanded first a regiment and then a division. During the 19121913 Balkan Wars, he
was chief of staff of the Second Army and
participated in the siege of Adrianople.
During AugustOctober 1915, he was minister of war under Premier Vasil Radoslavov
(18541929), working to prepare his country
for entry into World War I on the side of the
Central Powers. He became commander of
the Bulgarian army in October 1915.
Zhekov directed Bulgarian forces that took
part in the defeat and occupation of Serbia in
1915 under overall German command.
Repeatedly the Germans ignored Zhekovs
proposals for action. In particular they refused
support for the Bulgarians to pursue the
defeated British and French across the Greek
frontier in the fall of 1915. In September 1916,
the Bulgarians seized control of the Aegean
port of Kavala. The Germans, overcommitted
militarily, requested the use of Zhekovs
troops in an offensive against Romania led
by Field Marshal August von Mackensen
(18491945). The Bulgarians then had to
defend most of the long Macedonian border,
with only scant German assistance, to protect
Bulgaria against Allied attack from Greece
and Salonika.

See also: Bulgaria in World War I; Dobro


Pole, Battle of, 1918; Radoslavov, Vasil

Further Reading
Bell, John D. Peasants in Power: Alexander
Stamboliski and the Bulgarian National
Union, 18991923. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1977.
Hall, Richard C. Balkan Breakthrough: The
Battle of Dobro Pole 1918. Bloomington:
Indiana University Press, 2010.
Zhekov, Nikola T. Bulgarskoto voistvo 1878
1928 g. Sofia: Bratya mladinovi, 1928.

364

Zog, King of the Albanians

Zog, King of the Albanians


(18951961)
Ahmed Bey Zogu/Zogolli was born on
October 8, 1895, in the village of Burgayet,
to Xhemal Pasha Zogolli (18601911),
the leader of the Muslim Mati tribe in
Ottoman-controlled central Albania. The
family of his mother, Sadije, the Toptanis,
claimed descent from the fifteenth-century
Albanian national hero Skanderbeg (1405
1468). Zog received some formal education
in Constantinople. He fought for Albanian
autonomy against the Young Turks in 1911,
and against the invading Serbs in 1912,
who sought Albanian territory. In the same
year, he was one of the signers of Albanian
independence. During the First World
War, Zog served in an Austro-Hungariansponsored unit. Austro-Hungarian authorities later detained him in Vienna. He
returned to Albania in 1919.
In 1920, he served as a delegate to the
Congress of Lushnje , which met to deal
with internal crisis and possible partition.
He then served as an interior minister and
commander of the military. After stabilizing
the country, Zog became prime minister in
1922. He left the government in 1924, after
popular sentiment turned against him and
an assassination attempt, but he continued
to run the country. A liberal rebellion in
June 1924 forced him to flee to Yugoslavia.
In December 1924, with Yugoslav backing
and accompanied by White Russian troops,
Zog returned to Albania and overthrew
the government of American-educated
Orthodox bishop Fan S. Noli (18821965).
A month later, he had the parliament name
him president. Parliament then approved a
new constitution granting him dictatorial
powers, and finally, in September 1928,
proclaimed him as king.

Zog succeeded in centralizing his control


by using oppressive measures that led to a
series of revolts and attempts on his life.
Yet, he introduced a number of Western
reforms and unsuccessfully tried to modernize the poverty-stricken country. In 1929, he
abolished Islamic law and introduced a civil
code similar to that of Kemalist Turkey. Zog
increasingly turned to Italy for economic
and military help. By the late 1920s, however, Italys growing influence alarmed
Zog, and several times in the 1930s, he
unsuccessfully tried to lessen Italian control
by turning to other countries.
In April 1938, Zog married Geraldine
Apponyi de Nagy-Apponyi (19152002), a
half-Hungarian, half-American aristocrat. On
April 5, 1939, she gave birth to Albanian
Crown Prince Leka (19392011). Two days
later, Italy invaded after Zog refused to turn
his country into an Italian protectorate. Zog
and his family fled to Greece and spent most
of World War II in Britain. The Communist
government of Enver Hoxha abolished the
monarchy in 1945. After the war Zog and
his family lived in Egypt, and later France.
He died in Suresnes, Hauts-de-Seine, France,
on April 9, 1961. Despite his devious methods
and uneven rule, Zog remained an Albanian
patriot throughout his life.
Gregory C. Ference
See also: Albanian Uprisings, 19101911; Albania, Italian Occupation of, 1939; Young Turks

Further Reading
Fischer, Bernd J. King Zog and the Struggle
for Stability in Albania. Boulder, CO: East
European Monographs, 1984.
Tomes, Jason. King Zog of Albania: Europes
Self-Made Muslim King. New York: New
York University Press, 2004.
Vickers, Miranda. The Albanians: A Modern
History. London: I. B. Tauris, 1995.

365

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Chronology

National Wars

1897

April 14: Greco-Ottoman War


begins
May 18: Armistice in
Greco-Ottoman War

1903

Ilinden Revolt in Macedonia

1908

Young Turk Revolt


Bosnian Crisis

1804

Serbian Revolt against


Ottoman Empire

1813

Serbian Revolt suppressed

1818

Serbian Revolt renewed

1821

Greek Revolt against Ottoman


Empire begins

1827

October 20: Battle of


Navarino

World War I
19121913

First Balkan War

1829

MaySeptember:
Russo-Ottoman War
September 14: Treaty of
Adrianople

1912

1859

Wallachia and Moldavia unite


under Prince Alexander Curza

1876

April 20: Bulgarian Revolt


against Ottomans begins
Serbo-Ottoman War

October 17: Ottoman Empire


declares war on Bulgaria,
Greece, and Serbia
October 24: Battle of
Kumanovo
November 9: Salonika
surrenders to Greeks
November 17: Battle of
Chataldzha

1913

March 6: Fall of Janina to Greeks


March 25: Fall of Adrianople
to Bulgarians
April 24: Fall of Scutari to
Montenegrins
May 30: Preliminary Peace of
London

1913

Second Balkan War June 30:


Bulgarian Forces attack
Greeks and Serbs

18771878

Russo-Ottoman War

1877

August 711: Battle of Shipka


Pass

1878

March 3: Treaty of San


Stefano
July 1: Treaty of Berlin

1885

November 216: BulgarianSerbian War

367

368

Chronology

July 18: Battle of Kalimantsi


August 10: Treaty of Bucharest
September 30: Treaty of
Constantinople
1914

June 28: Sarajevo Assassination


July 28: Austria-Hungary
declares war on Serbia
August 15: Battle of Cer
Mountain
December 15: AustroHungarians evacuate Belgrade

1915

October 5: British and French


troops begin to arrive in
Salonika
October 14: Bulgaria declares
war on Serbia
October: Serbia overrun by
Central Powers
December 20: Bulgarians
deploy along Greek frontier,
Macedonian Front established

1916

1917

January: Austro-Hungarian
forces overrun Montenegro
January 25: Montenegro
surrenders
August 17: Bulgarian
offensive on Macedonian
Front begins
August 27: Romania enters
war on side of Entente,
invades Austria-Hungary
September 2: Central Powers
invade Romania
October 23: Central Powers
take Constanta
November 19: Serbs take
Bitola
December 7: Central Powers
occupy Bucharest
July 2: Greece enters war on
side of Entente

August: Battle of Marasesti,


Romania
1918

May 7: Treaty of Bucharest,


Romania leaves war
September 14: Battle of
Dobro Pole begins
September 16: Battle of
Doiran begins
September 29: Bulgaria signs
armistice, leaves war
October 30: Ottoman Empire
leaves war
November 9: Romania reenters war on side of Entente
December 4: Kingdom of
Serbs, Croats and Slovenes
(Yugoslavia) proclaimed

1919

September 10: Treaty of


Saint-Germain, Austria
dismembered
November 27: Treaty of
Neuilly, Bulgaria punished

1920

June 4: Treaty of Trianon,


Hungary dismembered
August 10: Treaty of Se`vres,
Ottoman Empire dissolved

Interwar

19191922

Greco-Turkish War

1921

Little Entente established

1923

October 29: Turkish Republic


proclaimed

1934

February 9: Balkan Pact signed

1939

April 7: Albania invaded


by Italy

World War II
1940

June 28: Soviet Russian army


occupies Romanian Bessarabia

Chronology

October 1: Red Army enters


Yugoslavia
October 14: British troops
enter Athens
October 20: Red Army and
Partisan forces liberate
Belgrade
December 3: Battle of Athens
begins

October 28: Italian forces


invade Greece from Albania
November 7: German forces
enter Romania
November 23: Romania joins
German alliance
1941

March 4: Yugoslavia joins


German alliance
March 27: Anti-German
government seizes power in
Yugoslavia
April 6: Yugoslavia and
Greece invaded by Germany,
Hungary, and Italy
April 17: Yugoslavia surrenders
April 27: Greece surrenders
May: Chetnik resistance in
Yugoslavia begins
May 20: German paratroops
land in Crete
June 22: German and Romanian forces invade Soviet
Russia; Partisan resistance
begins in Yugoslavia
October 16: Romanian forces
occupy Odessa

1942

July 1: Fall of Sevastopol to


German and Romanian forces
November 19: Soviet Russian
counterattack at Stalingrad
begins

1943

February 2: German and


Romanian forces surrender
at Stalingrad
August 28: Death of Czar
Boris III

1944

August 23: Romania defects


from Axis, joins Soviet
Russia; Marshall Antonescu
arrested
September 9: Bulgaria defects
from Axis

1945

Partisan victories in Yugoslavia and Albania

Cold War
19451949

Greek Civil War

1948

June 28: Yugoslav-Soviet Split

1954

August 9: Balkan Pact

1955

Warsaw Pact established

Yugoslav Wars
1980

May 4: Death of Tito

1991

February: Serbs in Krajina


resist Croatian government,
beginning of Croat War
June 25: Declarations of Croat
and Slovene independence
JuneJuly: Slovene war
July 7: Slovene War ends
November 17: Fall of Vukovar

1992

April: Bosnian War begins

1995

July 12: Srebrinica Massacre


September 11: Operation
Storm begins
November 11: Dayton Peace
Accords end Bosnian War

1998

Kosovo Revolt begins

19981999

Operation Horseshoe

1999

March: NATO air assault


on Yugoslavia begins

369

370

Chronology

June 12: NATO troops enter


Kosovo
2001

January: Macedonian conflict


begins
August 13: Ohrid agreement
ends fighting in Macedonia

2006

March 11: Death of Slobodan


Milosevic
June 3: Montenegro declares
independence

2008

February 17: Kosovo formally


declares independence

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Editor and Contributors

Editor
Richard C. Hall
Department of History and Political Science
Georgia Southwestern State University
Contributors
Jon C. Anderson Jr.
Virginia Military Institute

Bernard Cook
Provost Distinguished Professor
of History
Loyola University, New Orleans

Walter F. Bell
Independent Scholar

Maeve Cowan
Independent Scholar

Bestami S. Bilgic
Canakkale Onsekiz Mart University &
Turkish Historical Society (Turkey)

Brig. Gen. Uzal W. Ent (Ret.)


Military Historian

Anna Boros
Independent Scholar

Gregory C. Ference
Professor of History
Salisbury University

Dino E. Buenviaje
Lecturer
Riverside Community College

Timothy L. Francis
Historian
Naval Historical Center (NO9B)
Department of the Navy

Antoine Capet, FRHS


Head of British Studies
University of Rouen

James W. Frusetta
Assistant Professor
Hampden Sydney College

Bert Chapman
Government Information, Political
Science, & Economics Librarian
Purdue University Libraries

375

376

Editor and Contributors

Richard C. Hall
Chair
Department of History and Political Science
Georgia Southwestern State University
Neil A. Hamilton
Professor of History
Spring Hill College
Laura J. Hilton
Associate Professor and Chair
Department of History
Muskingum University.
Gordon E. Hogg
Special Collections and Archives
University of Kentucky Libraries
John J. Horton
Deputy Librarian
University of Bradford
Michael D. Johnson
Independent Scholar
Robert B. Kane
Director of History
Air University
Maxwell Air Force Base
Gary Kerley
Independent Scholar
Lucian N. Leustean
Senior Lecturer
Aston University
Bonnie K. Levine-Berggren
Adjunct Professor
Georgia Southwestern State University
Alessandro Massignani
Independent Scholar

Lisa McCallum
Independent Scholar
Joseph McCarthy
Independent Scholar
James Brian McNabb
Professor
Department of Social Science
American University of Iraq, Sulaimani
Karen Mead
Independent Scholar
Marko Milivojevic
Independent Scholar
Alexander Mikaberidze
Assistant Professor
Department of History and Social Sciences
Louisiana State University, Shreveport
Josip Mocnik
Director of Libraries
Georgia College
Irina Mukhina
Assistant Professor of History
Assumption College
Michael S. Neiberg
Professor of History
Co-Director of the Center for the Study
of War and Society
University of Southern Mississippi
Jason Newman
Professor of History
Consumnes River College
Christian Nuenlist
Professor
University of Zurich

Editor and Contributors

Eric W. Osborne
Adjunct Professor of History
Virginia Military Institute

Gerald D. Swick
Senior Editor for Digital Media
Weider History Group, Inc.

zcan
Ahmet O
Faculty Member
Cankr Karatekin University

David Tal
Professor
Tel Aviv University

Neville Panthaki
Independent Scholar

James Tallon
Assistant Professor
Lewis University

Paul G. Pierpaoli Jr.


Fellow
Military History, ABC-CLIO, Inc.

Brian C. Trueblood
Virginia Military Institute

John David Rausch Jr.


Teel Bivins Professor of Political
Science
West Texas A&M University
Annette Richardson
University of Alberta
Karl Roider
Alumni Professor of History
Louisiana State University
Margaret Sankey
Professor of History
Minnesota State University, Moorhead
Mary Kate Schneider
University of Maryland
Charles R. Shrader
Independent Scholar
Brian G. Smith
Associate Professor of Political Science
Georgia Southwestern State University
Eva-Maria Stolberg
Lecturer
Institute of Russian History

Spencer C. Tucker
Senior Fellow
Military History, ABC-CLIO, Inc.
Brandon H. Turner
Virginia Military Institute
Mesut Uyar
Associate Professor
University of New South Wales
Dierk Walter
Hamburger Institut fur Sozialforschung
Hamburg, Germany
A. J. L. Waskey
Professor of Social Science
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Tim J. Watts
Content Development Librarian
Kansas State University
James H. Willbanks
Director, Department of Military
History
U.S. Army Command and General
Staff College

377

378

Editor and Contributors

Hedley P. Willmott
Honorary Research Associate
Greenwich Maritime Institute

Fatih Yesil
Faculty Member
Hacettepe University

Anna M. Wittmann
University of Alberta

Gultekin Yildiz
Faculty Member
University of Istanbul

Topical Index

Entry
Adrianople, Siege of, 19121913
Albania in the Balkan Wars
Balkan League
Balkan War, First, 19121913
Balkan War, Second, 1913
Balkan Wars, 19121913, Causes
Balkan Wars, 19121913, Consequences
Balkan Wars, 19121913, Naval Campaigns
Bucharest, Treaty of, 1913
Bulgaria in the Balkan Wars
Chataldzha, Battle of, 1912
Constantinople, Treaty of, 1913
Contested Zone (Macedonia), 1912
Greece in the Balkan Wars
Greek Military Coup, 1909
Janina, Siege of, 19121913
Kalimantsi, Battle of, 1913
Kumanovo, Battle of, 1912
London, Treaty of, 1913
Lyule Burgas-Buni Hisar, Battle of, 1912
Mahmud Muhtar Pasha
Montenegro in the Balkan Wars
Novi Pazar, Sanjak of
Ottoman Empire in the Balkan Wars
Romania in the Balkan Wars
Sarkoy and Baloyir, Battles of
Savov, Mihail
Scutari, Siege of, 19121913
Serbia and the Balkan Wars

Category
Event Overview
Event Overview
Organization Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Place Overview
Event Overview
Movement Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Individual Overview
Event Overview
Place Overview
Organization Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Individual Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview

379

Conflict
Balkan Wars
Balkan Wars
Balkan Wars
Balkan Wars
Balkan Wars
Balkan Wars
Balkan Wars
Balkan Wars
Balkan Wars
Balkan Wars
Balkan Wars
Balkan Wars
Balkan Wars
Balkan Wars
Balkan Wars
Balkan Wars
Balkan Wars
Balkan Wars
Balkan Wars
Balkan Wars
Balkan Wars
Balkan Wars
Balkan Wars
Balkan Wars
Balkan Wars
Balkan Wars
Balkan Wars
Balkan Wars
Balkan Wars

380

Topical Index

Stamboliski, Aleksandur

Individual Overview

Alexander I, King of Yugoslavia

Individual Overview

Dimitriev, Radko

Individual Overview

Enver Pasha

Individual Overview

Epirus

Place Overview

Ferdinand I, Czar of Bulgaria

Individual Overview

Salonika

Place Overview

Stepanovic, Stepa

Individual Overview

Alexander of Battenberg, Prince of Bulgaria Individual Overview


Bulgarian-Serb War, 1885

Event Overview

Slivnitsa, Battle of, 1885

Event Overview

Balkan Pact, 1954


Ceausescu, Nicolae
Cold War in the Balkans
Corfu Channel Incident, 1946
Cyprus War, 1974
Djilas, Milovan
Greek Civil War
Hoxha, Enver
North Atlantic Treaty Organization
Papandreou, George
Transnistrian War
Trieste Dispute
Truman Doctrine
Vaphiadis, Markos
Warsaw Pact
Yugoslav Overflight Incidents, 1946
Yugoslav-Soviet Split
Carol II, King of Romania
Corfu Incident, 1923
Fiume/Rijeka, 19191924
Greco-Italian War, 19401941

Organization Overview
Individual Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Individual Overview
Event Overview
Individual Overview
Organization Overview
Individual Overview
Event Overview
Place Overview
Event Overview
Individual Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Individual Overview
Event Overview
Place Overview
Event Overview

Balkan Wars,
Interwar Years
Balkan Wars,
World War I
Balkan Wars,
World War I
Balkan Wars,
World War I
Balkan Wars,
World War I
Balkan Wars,
World War I
Balkan Wars,
World War I
Balkan Wars,
World War I
Bulgarian-Serb
War
Bulgarian-Serb
War
Bulgarian-Serb
War
Cold War
Cold War
Cold War
Cold War
Cold War
Cold War
Cold War
Cold War
Cold War
Cold War
Cold War
Cold War
Cold War
Cold War
Cold War
Cold War
Cold War
Interwar Years
Interwar Years
Interwar Years
Interwar Years

Topical Index

Greco-Turkish War, 19191922


Greens (Montenegro)
Iron Guard
Lausanne, Treaty of, 1923
Little Entente
Metaxas, Ioannis
Mihailov, Ivan
Military League (Bulgaria)
Neuilly, Treaty of, 1920
Romanian Campaign in Hungary, 1919
Saint-Germain, Treaty of, 1919
Sakarya River, Battle of, 1921
Sevres, Treaty of, 1920
Smyrna, Destruction of, 1922
Trianon, Treaty of, 1920
Zog, King of the Albanians
Abdulhamid II

Event Overview
Movement Overview
Organization Overview
Event Overview
Organization Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview
Organization Overview
Thing Overview
Event Overview
Thing Overview
Event Overview
Thing Overview
Event Overview
Thing Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview

Adrianople, Treaty of, 1829

Event Overview

Albanian Uprisings, 19101911

Event Overview

Alexander Obrenovic, King of Serbia

Individual Overview

Ali Pasha

Individual Overview

Berlin, Treaty of, 1878

Event Overview

Bosnia, Austrian Occupation, 1878

Event Overview

Bosnian Crisis, 19081909

Event Overview

Bosnian Revolt, 1876

Event Overview

Bulgarian Horrors, 1876

Event Overview

Carol I, King of Romania

Individual Overview

Cherniaev, M. G.

Individual Overview

Cretan Crisis, 1896

Event Overview

Crimean War, Balkan Operations

Event Overview

Interwar Years
Interwar Years
Interwar Years
Interwar Years
Interwar Years
Interwar Years
Interwar Years
Interwar Years
Interwar Years
Interwar Years
Interwar Years
Interwar Years
Interwar Years
Interwar Years
Interwar Years
Interwar Years
Ottoman
Conflicts
Ottoman
Conflicts
Ottoman
Conflicts
Ottoman
Conflicts
Ottoman
Conflicts
Ottoman
Conflicts
Ottoman
Conflicts
Ottoman
Conflicts
Ottoman
Conflicts
Ottoman
Conflicts
Ottoman
Conflicts
Ottoman
Conflicts
Ottoman
Conflicts
Ottoman
Conflicts

381

382

Topical Index

Greco-Ottoman War, 1897

Event Overview

Greek War of Independence, 18211832

Event Overview

Herzegovina Revolt, 1875

Event Overview

Ilinden Uprising, 1903

Event Overview

Karageorge (George Petrovic)

Individual Overview

Levski, Vasil

Individual Overview

Mahmud II, Ottoman Sultan

Individual Overview

Mehmet Ali

Individual Overview

Montenegro in Balkan Events, 18761878

Event Overview

Navarino, Battle of, 1827

Event Overview

Obrenovic, Milan

Individual Overview

Obrenovic, Milos

Individual Overview

Ottoman Counterinsurgency Operations in


the Balkans and Crete
Ottoman Empire

Event Overview

Pleven, Siege of, 1877

Event Overview

Romanian Peasant Uprising

Event Overview

Russo-Ottoman War, 18061812

Event Overview

Russo-Ottoman War, 18281829

Event Overview

Russo-Ottoman War, 18771878

Event Overview

San Stefano, Treaty of, 1878

Event Overview

Selim III

Individual Overview

Serbian War of Independence, 18041817

Event Overview

Organization Overview

Ottoman
Conflicts
Ottoman
Conflicts
Ottoman
Conflicts
Ottoman
Conflicts
Ottoman
Conflicts
Ottoman
Conflicts
Ottoman
Conflicts
Ottoman
Conflicts
Ottoman
Conflicts
Ottoman
Conflicts
Ottoman
Conflicts
Ottoman
Conflicts
Ottoman
Conflicts
Ottoman
Conflicts
Ottoman
Conflicts
Ottoman
Conflicts
Ottoman
Conflicts
Ottoman
Conflicts
Ottoman
Conflicts
Ottoman
Conflicts
Ottoman
Conflicts
Ottoman
Conflicts

Topical Index

Serbo-Ottoman War, 1876

Event Overview

Shipka Pass, Battles of, 18771878

Event Overview

Suleyman Husnu Pasha

Individual Overview

Tepelene, Ali Pasha

Individual Overview

Vladimirescu, Tudor

Individual Overview

VMRO

Organization Overview

Ypsilantis, Alexander

Individual Overview

Albania in World War I


Austria-Hungary in the Balkans during
World War I
Averescu, Alexandru
Black Hand
Bucharest, Treaty of, 1918
Bulgaria in World War I
Cer Mountain, Battle of, 1914
Constantine I, King of Greece
Corfu Declaration, 1917
Dimitrijevic, Dragutin
Dobro Pole, Battle of, 1918
Doiran Battles, 19151918
Gallipoli, 1915
Germany in the Balkans during World War I
Greece in World War I
Italy in the Balkans during World War I
Kosovo, Battle of, 1915
Lake Prespa, Battle of, 1917
Macedonian Front, 19151918
Marasesti, Battle of, 1917
Montenegro in World War I
National Schism (Greece), 19161917
Nikola I, King of Montenegro
Odessa, Siege of, 1941
Ottoman Empire in World War I
Princip, Gavrilo
Putnik, Radomir
Radomir Rebellion, 1918
Romania in World War I

Event Overview
Event Overview

Ottoman
Conflicts
Ottoman
Conflicts
Ottoman
Conflicts
Ottoman
Conflicts
Ottoman
Conflicts
Ottoman
Conflicts
Ottoman
Conflicts
World War I
World War I

Individual Overview
Organization Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Individual Overview
Event Overview
Individual Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Individual Overview
Event Overview
Organization Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview

World War I
World War I
World War I
World War I
World War I
World War I
World War I
World War I
World War I
World War I
World War I
World War I
World War I
World War I
World War I
World War I
World War I
World War I
World War I
World War I
World War I
World War I
World War I
World War I
World War I
World War I
World War I

383

384

Topical Index

Romania, Invasion of, 1916


Sarajevo Assassination, 1914
Serbia, Invasions of, 1914
Serbia, Invasions of, 1915
Serbia in World War I
Serbian Retreat, 1915
Venizelos, Elutherios
Young Turks
Yugoslav Military Coup
Zhekov, Nikola
Kemal, Mustafa

Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Individual Overview
Organization Overview
Event Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview

Albania, Italian Occupation of


Albania in World War II
Antonescu, Ion
Balkan Entente, 1934
Balli Kombetar
Bessarabia
Black Sea Campaign, 19411944
Boris III, Czar of Bulgaria
Bukovina
Bulgaria in World War II
Bulgarian Fatherland War, 19441945
Cetniks
Crete, Battle of, 1941
Dobrudja
Dodecanese Campaign, 1944
EAM/ELAS
EDES
Germany in the Balkans during
World War II
Greece, Invasion of, 1941
Greece in World War II
Handschar SS Division
The Holocaust in the Balkans
Italy in the Balkans during World War II
Michael I, King of Romania
Mihajlovic, Dragoljub Draza
Nedic, Milan
Partisans, Albania
Partisans, Bulgaria
Partisans, Yugoslavia
Pavelic, Ante

Event Overview
Event Overview
Individual Overview
Organization Overview
Organization Overview
Place Overview
Event Overview
Individual Overview
Place Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Organization Overview
Event Overview
Place Overview
Event Overview
Organization Overview
Organization Overview
Event Overview

World War I
World War I
World War I
World War I
World War I
World War I
World War I
World War I
World War I
World War I
World War I,
Interwar Years
World War II
World War II
World War II
World War II
World War II
World War II
World War II
World War II
World War II
World War II
World War Ii
World War II
World War II
World War II
World War II
World War II
World War II
World War II

Event Overview
Event Overview
Organization Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview
Organization Overview
Organization Overview
Organization Overview
Individual Overview

World War II
World War II
World War II
World War II
World War II
World War II
World War II
World War II
World War II
World War II
World War II
World War II

Topical Index

Ploesti, Bombing of, 19431944


Romania, Invasion of, 1944
Romania in World War II
Romanian Campaign in Hungary, 19441945
Romanian Coup, August 1944
Skanderbeg SS Division
Stalingrad, Battle of, 19421943
Tsolakoglou, Georgios
Ustase
Vienna Award, Second
World War II Peace Settlement in the
Balkans
Yugoslavia, Axis Occupation Forces in
World War II
Yugoslavia, Collaborationist Forces in
World War II
Yugoslavia, Invasion of, 1941
Yugoslavia in World War II
Tito, Josip Broz

Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Organization Overview
Event Overview
Individual Overview
Organization Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview

World War II
World War II
World War II
World War II
World War II
World War II
World War II
World War II
World War II
World War II
World War II

Organization Overview

World War II

Movement Overview

World War II

Event Overview
Event Overview
Individual Overview

Yugoslavia

Place Overview

Bihac
Bosnian Forces, 1992
Bosnian War, 19921995
Brioni Agreement
Croat Forces, 19911995
Croat War, 19911995
Dayton Peace Accords, 1995
Horseshoe, Operation, 1998
Izetbegovic, Alia
JNA (Yugoslav Peoples Army)
Karadzic, Radovan
Kosovo Liberation Army
Kosovo War, 19981999
Macedonia
Macedonian War, 2001
Milosevic, Slobodan
Mladic, Ratko
NATO in the Balkans
Sarajevo, Siege of, 19921995
Slovene War, 1991
Srebrenica Massacre, 1995

Place Overview
Organization Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Organization Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Individual Overview
Organization Overview
Individual Overview
Organization Overview
Event Overview
Place Overview
Event Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview
Organization Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview

World War II
World War II
World War II,
Cold War
World War II,
Cold War,
Yugoslav Wars
Yugoslav Wars
Yugoslav Wars
Yugoslav Wars
Yugoslav Wars
Yugoslav Wars
Yugoslav Wars
Yugoslav Wars
Yugoslav Wars
Yugoslav Wars
Yugoslav Wars
Yugoslav Wars
Yugoslav Wars
Yugoslav Wars
Yugoslav Wars
Yugoslav Wars
Yugoslav Wars
Yugoslav Wars
Yugoslav Wars
Yugoslav Wars
Yugoslav Wars
Yugoslav Wars

385

386

Topical Index

Storm, Operation, 1995


Tudjman, Franjo
UNPROFOR
Vance Owen Plan, 1993
Vukovar, Siege of, 1991
Yugoslav Wars, 19911995
Yugoslav Wars, 19911995, Causes
Yugoslav Wars, 19911995, Consequences

Event Overview
Individual Overview
Organization Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview

Yugoslav Wars
Yugoslav Wars
Yugoslav Wars
Yugoslav Wars
Yugoslav Wars
Yugoslav Wars
Yugoslav Wars
Yugoslav Wars

Categorical Index

Events
Adrianople, Siege of, 19121913
Adrianople, Treaty of, 1829
Albania, Italian Occupation of
Albania in the Balkan Wars
Albania in World War I
Albania in World War II
Albanian Uprisings, 19101911
Austria-Hungary in the Balkans during World War I
Balkan War, First, 19121913
Balkan War, Second, 1913
Balkan Wars, 19121913, Causes
Balkan Wars, 19121913, Consequences
Balkan Wars, 19121913, Naval Campaigns
Berlin, Treaty of, 1878
Black Sea Campaign, 19411944
Bosnia, Austrian Occupation, 1878
Bosnian Crisis, 19081909
Bosnian Revolt, 1876
Bosnian War, 19921995
Brioni Agreement
Bucharest, Treaty of, 1913
Bucharest, Treaty of, 1918
Bulgaria in the Balkan Wars
Bulgaria in World War I
Bulgaria in World War II
Bulgarian Fatherland War, 19441945
Bulgarian Horrors, 1876
Bulgarian-Serb War, 1885
Cer Mountain, Battle of, 1914

387

Category
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview

388

Categorical Index

Chataldzha, Battle of, 1912


Cold War in the Balkans
Constantinople, Treaty of, 1913
Corfu Declaration, 1917
Corfu Channel Incident, 1946
Corfu Incident, 1923
Cretan Crisis, 1896
Crete, Battle of, 1941
Crimean War, Balkan Operations
Croat War, 19911995
Cyprus War, 1974
Dayton Peace Accords, 1995
Dobro Pole, Battle of, 1918
Dodecanese Campaign, 1944
Doiran, Battles of, 19151918
Gallipoli, 1915
Germany in the Balkans during World War I
Germany in the Balkans during World War II
Greco-Italian War, 19401941
Greco-Ottoman War, 1897
Greco-Turkish War, 19191922
Greece, Invasion of, 1941
Greece in the Balkan Wars
Greece in World War I
Greece in World War II
Greek Civil War
Greek Military Coup, 1909
Greek War of Independence, 18211832
Herzegovina Revolt, 1875
The Holocaust in the Balkans
Horseshoe, Operation, 1998
Ilinden Uprising, 1903
Italy in the Balkans during World War I
Italy in the Balkans during World War II
Janina, Siege of, 19121913
Kalimantsi, Battle of, 1913
Kosovo, Battle of, 1915
Kosovo War, 19981999
Kumanovo, Battle of, 1912
Lake Prespa, Battle of, 1917
Lausanne, Treaty of, 1923
London, Treaty of 1913
Lyule Burgas-Buni Hisar, Battle of, 1912

Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview

Categorical Index

Macedonian Front, 19151918


Macedonian War, 2001
Marasesti, Battle of, 1917
Montenegro in Balkan Events, 18761878
Montenegro in the Balkan Wars
Montenegro in World War I
National Schism (Greece), 19161917
Navarino, Battle of, 1827
Odessa, Siege of, 1941
Ottoman Counterinsurgency Operations
in the Balkans and Crete
Pleven, Siege of, 1877
Ploesti, Bombing of, 19431944
Radomir Rebellion, 1918
Romania, Invasion of, 1916
Romania, Invasion of, 1944
Romania in the Balkan Wars
Romania in World War I
Romania in World War II
Romanian Campaign in Hungary, 1919
Romanian Campaign in Hungary, 19441945
Romanian Coup, August 1944
Romanian Peasant Uprising
Russo-Ottoman War, 18061812
Russo-Ottoman War, 18281829
Russo-Ottoman War, 18771878
Sakarya River, Battle of, 1921
San Stefano, Treaty of, 1878
Sarajevo, Siege of, 19921995
Sarajevo Assassination, 1914
Sarkoy and Baloyir, Battles of, 1913
Scutari, Siege of, 19121913
Serbia, Invasions of, 1914
Serbia, Invasions of, 1915
Serbia and the Balkan Wars
Serbia in World War I
Serbian Retreat, 1915
Serbian War of Independence, 18041817
Serbo-Ottoman War, 1876
Shipka Pass, Battles of, 18771878
Slivnitsa, Battle of, 1885
Slovene War, 1991
Smyrna, Destruction of, 1922

Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview

389

390

Categorical Index

Srebrenica Massacre, 1995


Stalingrad, Battle of, 19421943
Storm, Operation, 1995
Transnistrian War
Truman Doctrine
Vance-Owen Plan, 1993
Vienna Award, Second
Vukovar, Siege of, 1991
Warsaw Pact
World War II Peace Settlement in the Balkans
Yugoslavia, Invasion of, 1941
Yugoslavia in World War II
Yugoslav Military Coup
Yugoslav Overflight Incidents, 1946
Yugoslav-Soviet Split
Yugoslav Wars, 19911995
Yugoslav Wars, 19911995, Causes
Yugoslav Wars, 19911995, Consequences

Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview
Event Overview

Individuals
Abdulhamid II
Alexander I, King of Yugoslavia
Alexander Obrenovic, King of Serbia
Alexander of Battenberg, Prince of Bulgaria
Ali Pasha
Antonescu, Ion
Averescu, Alexandru
Boris III, Czar of Bulgaria
Carol I, King of Romania
Carol II, King of Romania
Ceausescu, Nicolae
Cherniaev, M. G.
Constantine I, King of Greece
Dimitriev, Radko
Dimitrijevic, Dragutin
Djilas, Milovan
Enver Pasha
Ferdinand I, Czar of Bulgaria
Hoxha, Enver
Izetbegovic, Alia
Karadzic, Radovan
Karageorge (George Petrovic)
Kemal, Mustafa

Individual Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview

Categorical Index

Levski, Vasil
Mahmud II, Ottoman Sultan
Mahmud Muhtar Pasha
Mehmet Ali
Metaxas, Ioannis
Michael I, King of Romania
Mihailov, Ivan
Mihajlovic, Dragoljub Draza
Milosevic, Slobodan
Mladic, Ratko
Nedic, Milan
Nikola I, King of Montenegro
Obrenovic, Milan
Obrenovic, Milos
Papandreou, George
Pavelic, Ante
Princip, Gavrilo
Putnik, Radomir
Savov, Mihail
Selim III
Stamboliski, Aleksandur
Stepanovic, Stepa
Suleyman Husnu Pasha
Tepelene, Ali Pasha
Tito, Josip Broz
Tsolakoglou, Georgios
Tudjman, Franjo
Vaphiadis, Markos
Venizelos, Elutherios
Vladimirescu, Tudor
Ypsilantis, Alexander
Zhekov, Nikola
Zog, King of the Albanians

Individual Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview
individual Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview
Individual Overview

Organizations
Balkan Entente, 1934
Balkan League
Balkan Pact, 1954
Balli Kombetar
Black Hand
Bosnian Forces
Cetniks
Croat Forces, 19911995

Organization Overview
Organization Overview
Organization Overview
Organization Overview
Organization Overview
Organization Overview
Organization Overview
Organization Overview

391

392

Categorical Index

EAM/ELAS
EDES
Greens (Montenegro)
Handschar SS Division
Iron Guard
JNA (Yugoslav Peoples Army)
Kosovo Liberation Army
Little Entente
Military League (Bulgaria)
NATO in the Balkans
North Atlantic Treaty Organization
Ottoman Empire
Ottoman Empire in the Balkan Wars
Ottoman Empire in World War I
Partisans, Albania
Partisans, Bulgaria
Partisans, Yugoslavia
Skanderbeg SS Division
UNPROFOR
Ustasa
VMRO
Young Turks
Yugoslavia, Axis Occupation Forces in during World War II
Yugoslavia, Collaborationist Forces in World War II

Organization Overview
Organization Overview
Organization Overview
Organization Overview
Organization Overview
Organization Overview
Organization Overview
Organization Overview
Organization Overview
Organization Overview
Organization Overview
Organization Overview
Organization Overview
Organization Overview
Organization Overview
Organization Overview
Organization Overview
Organization Overview
Organization Overview
Organization Overview
Organization Overview
Organization Overview
Organization Overview
Organization Overview

Places
Bessarabia
Bihac
Bukovina
Contested Zone (Macedonia), 1912
Dobrudja
Epirus
Fiume/Rijeka, 19191924
Macedonia
Novi Pazar, Sanjak of
Salonika
Trieste Dispute
Yugoslavia

Place Overview
Place Overview
Place Overview
Place Overview
Place Overview
Place Overview
Place Overview
Place Overview
Place Overview
Place Overview
Place Overview
Place Overview

Treaties
Neuilly, Treaty of, 1920
Saint-Germain, Treaty of, 1919
Sevres, Treaty of, 1920
Trianon, Treaty of, 1920

Thing Overview
Thing Overview
Thing Overview
Thing Overview

General Index

Note: Page numbers in bold font indicate main entries.


Alexander I, King of Yugoslavia, 1112,
148, 338, 348
Alexander II, Czar of Bulgaria, 13, 60
Alexander II, Czar of Russia, 204, 257
Alexander III, Czar of Bulgaria, 14, 60
Alexander Obrenovic, King of Serbia,
1113, 93
Alexander of Battenberg, Prince of
Bulgaria, 1314, 6061, 106
Alexander the Great, 17475
Alexandrov, Todor, 326
Ali, Mehmet, 18586, 199
Alia, Ramiz, 143
Ali Pasha, 1415
Allenby, Edmund H., 161
Allied Force air campaign, 142
Allied Supreme War Council, 309
Anti-Fascist Council of the Peoples Liberation
of Yugoslavia (AVNOJ), 154, 350
Antipater, 174
Antonescu, Ion, 1516
arrest of, 250
and Iron Guards leaders, 14546
and Jewish population in Romania, 140
and Michael I, 16, 187
and Odessa, Siege of, 211
and Romanian Coup, 25051
as Romania prime minister, 324
and Tripartite Pact, 238, 250
and World War II, 24547

A., Harry, 229


Abdic, Fikret, 36
Abdulaziz, Ottoman Sultan, 300, 301
Abdulhamid I, Ottoman Sultan, 180, 212, 303
Abdulhamid II, 12
and Albanian uprisings, 10
dethronement of, 183
and Kemal, 160
true agreement with Serbia, 44
and Young Turks, 33436
Accolade, Operation, 97
Acheson, Dean, 88, 313
Adrianople, Siege of, 23
Adrianople, Treaty of, 3, 182, 256
Agamemnon, 222
Ahtisaari, Martii, 166
Albania
in Balkan Wars, 57
in World War I, 78
in World War II, 810
Italian occupation of, 34
Jewish protection, 138
Albanian Fascist Party, 4, 142
Albanian National Liberation Army
(ANLA), 224
Albanian uprisings, 1011
Aleksandrov, Todor, 187
Alexander, Czar of Russia, 282
Alexander, King of Greece, 124
Alexander I, Czar of Russia, 253

393

394

General Index

Apis. See Dimitrijevic, Dragutin


Arab Revolt, 221
Arafat, Yasser, 65
ARBiH (Army of the Republic of Bosnia
and Herzegovina), 4344
Armenian Genocide, 215
Armistice of Moudros, 119
Army Group Scholtz, 113, 177
Army of Epirus, 24, 105, 122
Army of the Republic of Bosnia and
Herzegovina (ARBiH), 4344
Army of Thessaly, 24, 122
Asakir-i Mansure-i Muhammediyye
(Victorious Troops
of Muhammad), 181
Asia Minor Campaign, 313
Asia Minor Catastrophe, 261
See also Greco-Turkish War; National
Struggle
Ataturk, Mustafa Kemal. See Kemal,
Mustafa
Austria-Hungary in the Balkans during
World War I, 1618
Austro-Hungarian First Army, 237
Austro-Turkish War, 15
Averescu, Alexandru, 1819, 243
AVNOJ (Anti-Fascist Council of the Peoples
Liberation of Yugoslavia), 154, 350
Balfour Declaration of 1917, 285
Balkan Entente, 20
Balkan League, 2021
attack on Albania, 5
and disposition of Macedonia, 26
and First Balkan War, 31
formation of, xviii, 132
Balkan Pact, 2122
Balkan War, First, 2226
Balkan League in, xviii
Bulgaria in, 106
causes of, 2830
commencement of, 5, 122
and Italy, 21
naval campaigns, 3233

siege of Adrianople, 2
and Treaty of London, 75, 172
Balkan War, Second, 2628, 175
and Alexander I, King of Yugoslavia, 11
and Antonescu, 15
Bulgaria in, 106, 157, 172
causes of, 30
naval campaigns, 3233
and Treaty of Bucharest, 4748, 54
and Treaty of Constantinople, 75
Balkan Wars, causes, 2830
Balkan Wars, consequences, 3132
Balkan Wars, Naval Campaigns, 3233
Balli Kombetar (BK), 1819, 3334, 224
Banditry, 303
BANU (Bulgarian National Agrarian
Union), 236, 297
Barbarossa, Operation, xix, 38, 117,
12021, 352
Battles. See specific battles
Belgrade Convention, 309
Benkovski, George, 60
Berlin, Treaty of, 3435
Austria-Hungary invasion of Bosnia and
Herzegovina provinces, 4041, 45, 137
and Balkan states, xvii
and Bulgaria, 60
and Dobrudja, 96
infraction of, 42
and Montenegro, 19394
Berlin Peace Treaty, 212
Besa, 138
Bessarabia, 35
Bey, Enver, 218
Bey, Hasan Riza, 270
Bihac, 36
Birdwood, William, 110
Black George. See Karageorge (George
Petrovic)
Black Hand, 3637, 93, 232, 26667
Black Sea Campaign, 3738
Boletini, Isa, 5
Bolshevik Revolution, 259
Bolshevism, 246

General Index

Bonacini, Luigi, 78
Boris III, Czar of Bulgaria, 3940,
106, 203, 236
Bosnia, Austrian Occupation, 4041
Bosnian Crisis, 29, 4142
Bosnian forces, 4344
Bosnian Revolt, 4445
Bosnian Serb Army (BSA), 292
Bosnian War, 4546
Bratianu, Gheorghe, 250
Brereton, Lewis H., 230
Brioni Agreement, 47
British Expeditionary Force (BEF)
and Bulgarian Second Army, 98
evacuation from Dunkerque, 111
evacuation from Greece, 8081
and Germanys invasion of Greece, 121
Bratianu, Ionel, 19, 242
Brusilov, A. A., 113
Bucharest, Treaty of, 1886, 61
Bucharest, Treaty of, 1913, 4748
and Albania, 6
and Bessarabia annexation, 35
and Dobrudja, 53, 96
and Serbia independence, 159
Bucharest, Treaty of, 1918, 4849
and Dobrudzha, 56
signing of, 24344
Bucharest pogrom, 140, 146
Bukovina, 4950
Bulgaria
anti-Jewish laws in, 13839
in the Balkan Wars, 5053
Macedonia invasion, 341
in World War I, 5357
in World War II, 5758
Bulgarian Communist Party (BCP), 225
Bulgarian Fatherland War, 5859
Bulgarian First Army
Battles of Doiran, 99
led by Kutinchev, 2324
Macedonia invasion, 341
and Serbian army, 162
Bulgarian Fourth Army, 36, 157

Bulgarian Horrors, 5960


Bulgarian National Agrarian Union
(BANU), 236, 297
Bulgarian Second Army
and Greek army, 27, 98, 123
and Serbian Second Army, 2, 25, 52
Bulgarian-Serbian Treaty, 27
Bulgarian-Serb War, 6061, 288
Bulgarian Third Army
defeated by Serbian army, 52
and Ottoman Fortress of Lozengrad, 173
in Thrace, 92
Byron, Lord, 304
Cabrinovic, Nedjelko, 232
Campioni, Inigo, 9798
Carden, Sackville, 108
Carol I, King of Romania, 6263, 242
Carol II, King of Romania, 6364, 145, 211,
245, 324
Cassander, 174
Castenfelt, Peter, 166
Catholicism, 349
Cavallero, Ugo, 116
Ceausescu, Nicolae, 6466
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), 310
Cer Mountain, Battle of, 6667
ermak, Ivan, 300
C
ervenko, Zvonimir, 299
C
etniks, 6768, 33839. See also
C
Mihajlovi, Dragoljub Draza
Charles I, Karl Eitel Friedrich. See Carol I,
King of Romania
Chataldzha, Battle of, 6869
Cherniaev, M. G., 70, 28384
Chernomyrdin, Viktor, 166
Chernyayev, Mikhail Grigorievich,
70, 28384
Chervenkov, Vulko, 96
Chetas, 325
Childe Harold, 304
Chotek, Sophie, 266
Christea, Miron, 64
Christianity, 242, 349

395

396

General Index

Christians
Balkan Orthodox, 337
and Great Smyrna Fire, 291
Greek- and Turkish-speaking, 262
Orthodox, 258, 318
and Young Turks, 335
Christmas Rebellion, 134
Chuikov, Vasily, 294
Churchill, Winston
and Dodecanese, 9798
and Gallipoli campaign, 108
and Greek Civil War, 130
and Stalin, 71
CIA (Central Intelligence Agency), 310
Ciano, Galeazzo, 323
Clinton, Bill, 91
Codrington, Sir Edward, 200
Cold War in the Balkans, 7072
Committee of Union and Progress
(CUP), 216, 267, 33435. See also
Young Turks
Communist Partisans, 202
Congress of Berlin, 207, 229
Constantine I, King of Greece, 7374
abdication, 124, 322
neutrality declaration, 119
Venizelos resignation demand, 74
Constantine II, King of Greece, 223
Constantinople, Treaty of, 28, 53,
75, 172, 219
Contested Zone (Macedonia), 7576
Convention of Akkirman, 256
Conversations with Stalin (Djilas), 94
Corfu Channel Incident, 7677
Corfu Declaration, 7778
Corfu Incident, 7879
Corti, Luigi, 78
Craiova, Treaty of, 57, 96, 241, 332
Cretan Crisis, 7980
Crete, Battle of, 8082
Crimean War, 8283, 256
Crna Ruka. See Black Hand
Croat Forces, 8384
Croatia, 34243

Croatian Defense Council, 84


Croatian Democratic Union
(HDZ), 314
Croatian Spring movement, 314
Croat War, 8487. See also
Yugoslav Wars
Crown Prince Alexander, 24, 37
Crown Prince Constantine, 24, 122, 153
Crown Prince Danilo, 24, 269
Csaky, Istvan, 323
Cuban Missile Crisis, 329
Culcer, Ioan, 241
Culture
Greek, 304
Muslim, 265
Ottoman, 214
Cunningham, Andrew, 81
Cuza, Alexandru, 62
Cvetkovic, Dragisa, 352
Cypriot Civil War, 8788
Cyprus War, 8890
Danckelmann, Heinrich, 202
Danev, Stoyan, 27, 52
DAnnunzio, Gabriele, 107
Dartmouth, 201
Daskalov, Raiko, 236
Davies, Mostyn, 225
Dayton Agreement, 152, 158, 265,
315, 340, 357
Dayton Peace Agreement, 45, 83, 91
Dedakovic, Mile, 327
Deed of Agreement (Sened-i Ittifak), 180
de Gaulle, Charles, 206
Delchev, Gotse, 325
Delfino, 116
Delphin, 33
Democratic Army of Greece (DSE), 101, 320
de Nagy-Apponyi, Geraldine Apponyi, 365
de Rigny, Henry Gauthier, 200
de Robeck, John, 108
dEsperay, Louis Franchet, 168, 309
Determined Falcon, Operation, 164
Deva, Xhafer, 287

General Index

Dimitriev, Radko, 92
attack on Ottomans, 69, 173
and Bulgarian Third Army, 2324
resignation from post of Bulgarian
minister, 54
Dimitrijevic, Dragutin, 11, 37,
93, 266
Disarmament Conference, 206
Djilas, Milovan, 94, 307
Djuic, Momcilo, 68
Djukanovic, Milo, 134
Dobro Pole, Battle of, 11, 95
Dobrudja, 96
Dodecanese Campaign, 9798
Doiran, Battles of, 9899
Dordevic, Vladan, 12
DSE (Democratic Army
of Greece), 101, 320
Dual Monarchy, 41, 11213
Dubcek, Alexander, 330
Duca, Ion, 145
Dumlupinar, Battle of, 120
Durham Light Infantry, 98
EAM (Greek National Liberation Front),
100101
and German occupation, 129
Greek Civil War, 12931
National Popular Liberation Army as
armed component of, 12728
and National Republican Greek
League, 128
See also ELAS (Greek Peoples
Liberation Army)
Eastern Orthodox Christianity, 242
ECMM (European Community Monitor
Mission), 47
EDES (National Republican Greek League),
101102, 12829
Einsatzgruppen, 137
Eisenhower, Dwight D., 97, 205
ELAS (Greek Peoples Liberation Army),
100101
and Greek Civil War, 12931

as Greek National Liberation Front armed


component, 12728
and National and Social Liberation, 129
and National Republican Greek
League, 102
See also EAM (Greek National Liberation
Front)
Elena, queen of Italy, 134
Elli, 116
Emmanuel III, Victor, 4, 8, 148
Ent, Uzal G., 230
Enver Pasha, 1024, 160, 183, 221, 267
Epirus, 1045
Etairia, Filiki, 133
European Community, 265, 29091
European Community Monitor Mission
(ECMM), 47
European Union (EU)
sanctions against Yugoslavia, 340
Vance-Owen peace plan and, 319
Yugoslav Wars and, 356, 361
Fatherland Front, 225
Fatherland War, 5859
Ferdinand, Czar of Bulgaria, 203,
236, 269, 297
Ferdinand, Franz
assassination of, 93, 112, 23132, 234,
26667, 278, 338
and Black Hand organization, 266
Ferdinand, Sophie, 231
Ferdinand I, Czar of Bulgaria, 106
abdication of, 56
joining Central Powers, 54
ordered attacks on Serbs and
Greeks, 52
and Savov, 27, 30
and victory over Ottomans, 51
Ferdinand I, King of Romania, 242
Ferdinand of Saxe-Gotha-Coburg, Prince of
Bulgaria, 61
Filiki Etairia (Society of Friends), 337
The Final Solution, 137. See also Hitler,
Adolf; Holocaust in the Balkans

397

398

General Index

First Jassy-Kishinev Operation, 239


Fiume/Rijeka, 1067
Foreign Affairs, 307
Four Power Pact. See Balkan Entente
Frasheri, Mehdi, 9
Fretter-Pico, Maximilian, 239
Freyberg, Bernard, 81
Gallipoli campaign, 10811
Garda de Fier. See Iron Guard
Garibaldi, Giuseppe, 153
Garibaldi, Ricciotti, 24, 153
George, David Lloyd, 285
George II, King of Greece
crowning as king, 74
government-in-exile, 127, 129
Zervas on, 101
George Papandreou Party, 223
Georgios Averof, 22, 32, 122
German Eleventh Army
attack on Serbia, 112
Bulgarian troops in, 95, 113, 177
German Ninth Army, 237
German-Soviet Non-Aggression Pact,
35, 64, 245
German Twelfth Army, 11415, 121
Germany
in the Balkans during World War I,
11113
in the Balkans during World War II,
11315
in Yugoslav territory, 34142
Gerstenberg, Alfred, 231, 251
Geshov, Ivan E., 5152
Gheorghiu-Dej, Gheorghe, 6465
Gligorov, Kiro, 176
Goering, Hermann, 295
Gonatas, Stylianos, 102
Gorbachev, Mikhail, 33031
Gorchakov, Alexander, 83
Gorchakov, Mikhail, 82
Gotovina, Ante, 84, 300
Goudi Coup. See Greek Military Coup
Grande Armee, 282

Great Serbian Retreat, 162


Great Smyrna Fire, 29192. See also
Smyrna, Destruction of
Greco-Italian War, 11617
Greco-Ottoman War, 11819
Greco-Turkish War, 11920, 261, 286, 322
Greece
in the Balkan Wars, 12223
invasion of, 12021
Jewish population during World War II,
13940
in World War I, 12325
in World War II, 12529
Greek Army of Epirus, 105, 153
Greek Civil War, 12932, 223, 263, 306
Greek Communist Party (KKE),
100101, 12931
Greek culture, 304
Greek First Army, 121
Greek military coup, 132
Greek Revolt, 254
Greek Second Army, 121
Greek War of Independence,
13334, 199
Greens (zelenasi), 134
Grigorescu, Eremea, 184
Guillaumat, Louis, 177
Gurko, Iosif, 286
Halder, Franz, 294
Hamidiye, 23, 33
Hamilton, Ian, 109
Hampel, Desiderius, 135
Handschar SS Division, 13536, 345
Haradinaj, Ramush, 164
Helen of Greece, 63, 187
Helle, 125, 148
Herzegovina Revolt, 13637
Herzl, Theodor, 1
Highlanders Rebellion, 1011
Himmler, Heinrich, 135, 287
Hitler, Adolf
attack on Soviet Union, 38, 114, 35152
attack on Yugoslavia, 114, 121, 126, 338

General Index

and attack on Yugoslavia, 34546


invasion of Greece, 117, 12021
and Operation Blau (Blue), 293
Soviet Union, invasion of, 211
and Stalingrad, Battle of, 29396
and Ustasa regime, 228
and World War II, 24546, 338,
34849
and Yugoslav Military Coup, 35152
HMS Leander, 76
HMS Mauritius, 76
HMS Orion, 76
HMS Saumarez, 76
HMS Superb, 76
HMS Volage, 76
Hohenzollern, Carol, 237
Holocaust in the Balkans, 13741. See also
Hitler, Adolf
Horseshoe, Operation, 14142, 357
Horthy, Miklos, 309
Hoth, Hermann, 294
Hoxha, Enver, 14243, 224, 288
and Albania, 10
and Albanias premiership, 143
death of, 143
meeting with Mao Zedong, 72
Hrvatska vojska (HV). See Croat Forces
Hrvatsko vijece obrane (HVO). See
Croatian Defense Council
Hungary
Romanian campaign of 1919 in, 248
Romanian campaign
of 19441945 in, 249
and Yugoslavia, 342
Hunter-Weston, Aylmer, 110
Ilinden-Preobrazhenski Uprising.
See Ilinden Uprising
Ilinden Uprising, 144, 174, 214, 325
Imperial School of Military
Engineering, 271
IMRO/VMRO (Internal Macedonian
Revolutionary Organization), 144, 174,
18788, 32526

Independent State of Croatia


(NDHNezavisna Drzava
Hrvatska), 226
Internal Macedonian Revolutionary
Organization (IMRO, or VMRO), 144,
174, 18788, 32526
International Boundary Commission, 78
International Court of Justice, 46, 77
International Criminal Tribunal, 315
International Criminal Tribunal for the
former Yugoslavia (ICTY)
formation of, 45
and Haradinaj, 164
indictment under, 91
and Milosevic, 191
and Mladic, 193
International Security Assistance Force
(ISAF), 199
Intra-Allied War. See Balkan War, Second
Iron Guard, 14546
and Carol II, 6364
and killing of Jews, 14546
leaders and Antonescu, 15
Islam, 21415, 33637
Islam between East and West
(Izetbegovic), 150
Italian Air Force P-38 Lightning, 353
Italo-Ottoman War, 29
Italo-Turkish War, 51, 97, 160
Italy
in the Balkans during World War I, 14647
in the Balkans during World War II,
14850
occupation of Yugoslavia, 342
Ivanov, Nikola, 2, 24
Izetbegovic, Alija, 15051
and Bosnian forces, 43
signing Dayton Agreement, 152
Janina, Siege of, 153
Jankovich, Bozhidar, 25
Jansa, Janez, 290
Jaruzelski, Wojciech, 330
Jellicoe, George, 97

399

400

General Index

Jeschonnek, Hans, 295


Jews
in Albania, 138
in Bulgaria, 13839
in Greece, 13940
in Romania, 140
in Yugoslavia, 14041
JNA (Yugoslav Peoples Army), 15456
and Bosnian forces, 43
in Croatia, 83
in Croat War, 8486
establishment of, 43
Joseph, Franz, 37, 93, 144, 266
Jugoslovenska Narodna Armija. See JNA
(Yugoslav Peoples Army)
Kadyr-Bey, Abdul, 3
Kalimantsi, Battle of, 157
Kamensky, Mikhail, 253
Karadzic, Radovan, 15758, 319,
355, 357
Karageorge (George Petrovic), 15860, 210
Karageorgevic, Alexander, 68, 210
Karageorgevic, Peter, 338
Karamanlis, Constantine, 88
Karl Anton, Prince of HohenzollernSigmaringen, 62

Karolyi, Mihaly, 3089


Karteria, 200
Kemal, Mustafa, 16061
accomplishments, 161
establishment of rival government, 169
and Greco-Turkish War, 11920
nationalist movement in Anatolia, 104
and Young Turks, 335
Kharkov, 38
Khrushchev, Nikita S.
de-Stalinization campaign, 143
focus on relationship with Tito, 72
visit to Belgrade, 22
and Warsaw Pact, 32830
Kings Own, 98
King Unifier. See Boris III, Czar of Bulgaria
Kitchener, Marshal Horatio, 108, 11011

KKE (Greek Communist Party), 100101,


12931
Knezes, 28182
Konev, Ivan G., 328
Koryzes, Alexander, 127
Kosovo, Battle of, 162, 337
Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA), 16364
and Kosovo insurgency, 141
and Serbian authorities, 357
Kosovo Verification Mission, 164
Kosovo War, 16466
Kostunica, Vojislav, 340
Kragujevac massacre, 202
Krajisnik, Momcilo, 158
Kremlin, 7172
Kucan, Milan, 289
Kucuk, Fazil, 8788
Kumanovo, Battle of, 16667
Kun, Bela, 244, 248
Kunchev, Vasil Ivanov. See Levski, Vasil
Kupi, Abas, 810
Kutinchev, Nikola, 173
Kutinchev, Vasil, 24
Kutuzov, Mikhail, 253
Kvaternik, Slavko, 343
Lake Prespa, Battle of, 168
Lambrino, Zizi, 63
Lausanne, Treaty of, 120, 16970, 284
League of National Christian
Defense, 145
League of Nations, 8, 34, 204, 261, 284
League of Private Initiative and
Decentralization, 335
Lebed, Alexander, 308
Levski, Vasil, 17071
Liberator Tsar. See Boris III, Czar of
Bulgaria
List, Wilhelm Siegmund, 121, 293, 346
Little Entente, 17172
Logothetopoulos, Konstantinos, 127
Lohr, Alexander, 341
Loisinger, Johanna, 14
Lojotic, Dimitrije, 344

General Index

London, Treaty of, 172


and Albanias independence, 6, 146
and First Balkan War, 75, 78
and Ottoman Empire, 31, 219, 256
and Sanjak division, 207
London Conference of Ambassadors, 7879
London Protocol of 1830, 79, 13334
Long Range Desert Group, 98
Ludendorff, Erich, 49
Lupescu, Elena Magda, 187, 245
Lyule BurgasBuni Hisar, Battle of, 173
Macedonia, 17476
Macedonian Front, 17678
Macedonian War, 17880
Macek, Vlatko, 352
Mahmud II, Ottoman Sultan, 133, 18082,
185, 254, 304
Mahmud Muhtar Pasha, 18284
Makarios III, 8789
Makedonia, 33
Malinovsky, Rodion, 239
Malobabic, Rade, 37
Manastir (Bitola), Battle of, 6
Maniu, Iuliu, 250
Manoilescu, Mihail, 323
Mao Zedong, 72, 143
Marasesti, Battle of, 184
Marasti, 38
Marita, Operation, xix, 117, 121, 126, 149
Markac, Mladen, 300
Martic, Milan, 299300
Martinovic, Anastasia, 204
Martinovich, Mitar, 24, 270
Masin, Draga, 12, 209
Maurer, Ion, 6465
McLean, Neil, 1819
Mecid I, Abdul, 136, 185
Mecidiye, 23, 33
Mehmet II, 214
Mehmet Ali, 18586, 199
Mekteb-i Harbiyye. See Ottoman Military
Academy
Metaxas, Ioannis, 186

death, 117, 120


and Italian invasion of Greece, 125
and Nazi Germany, 116
outlaw of KKE, 100
Metaxas Line, 121, 126
Michael I, King of Romania, 187, 239, 247,
249, 250
Michelson, Ivan I., 253
Mihailov, Ivan, 18788, 326
Mihajlovic, Dragoljub Draza, 18889
emergence of cetniks, 67
execution of, 68, 351
leading Cetniks, 349
Serbian massacre, 226
and Titos Partisans, 305
Military League (Bulgaria), 132, 189
Milne, George, 168, 285
Milosevic, Slobodan, 19092
as Balkan peacemaker, 191
death of, 192
economic sanctions on, 319
and Kosovo Liberation Army, 163
nationalist policies of, 134
Operation Horseshoe, 14142
and Serbia, 33940, 355, 360
and Slovene War, 289
and Vance-Owen peace plan, 319
and Yeltsin, 164
and Yugoslav Wars, 355, 360, 362
Mirkovic, Borivoje, 352
Mladic, Ratko, 19293
apprehended by Serbian
authorities, 357
Srebrenica invasion, 292
and Srebrenica invasion, 45
war crimes attributed to, 19293
Monro, Charles, 111
Montenegrin National Assembly, 205
Montenegro
in Balkan events, 18761878, 19394
in the Balkan wars, 19495
in World War I, 19596
Moskva, 38
Marasesti, Battle of, 184

401

402

General Index

Muhammad Ali of Egypt, 133, 181


Munich Agreement, 172
Murzteg agreement, 144
Muslims
Balkan Wars and, 219
Bosnian, 29293
Committee of Union and Progress (CUP)
and, 334
culture, 265
Great Smyrna Fire and, 292
Serbian War of Independence and, 28182
Yugoslav Wars and, 35556, 358, 361
Muslim SS, 135
Mussolini, Benito
and annexation of Albania, 8
invasion of Albania, 148
invasion of Corfu, 79
plans to invade Greece, xix, 105, 11417
and Yugoslav state, 148
Mustafa III, 270
Mustafa IV, 271
Nadezhda, 33
Napoleonic Wars, 159, 282, 304, 336
Narodna Odbrana (National Defense), 37
Nasser, Gamal Abdel, 306
National Guard Corps. See Croat Forces
Nationalism
Albanian, 304
Croatian, 314
Croat radical, 317
Romanian, 324
Serbian, 232, 360
Slavic, 258
Turkish, 300, 334, 336
western European, 216
Nationalist Army of Montenegro and
Herzegovina, 345
National Liberation Army (NLA), 15455,
17980
National Liberation Movement. See
Partisans, Albania
National Peasants, 63
National Radical Union, 223

National Republican Greek League (EDES),


100102, 12829
National Schism, 124, 19798, 263, 321
National Struggle, 261. See also Asia Minor
Catastrophe; Greco-Turkish War
NATO in the Balkans, 19899. See also North
Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)
Naval campaigns, Balkan Wars, 3233
Navarino, Battle of, 133, 199201
Nazi-Soviet Pact, 225, 226
Nedic, Milan, 127, 2013, 314, 343, 349
Nehru, Jawaharlal, 307
Neuilly, Treaty of, 2034
and Bulgaria, 39, 57
and Romania, 49
The New Class (Djilas), 94, 307
Nicholas, Grand Duke, 229
Nicholas I, Czar of Russia, 82, 254, 337
Nikola I, King of Montenegro, 2045
and Central Powers, 196
and Herzegovina unrest, 193
Montenegrin forces commander, 24
and Ottoman territory in Albania, 194
personal regime, 32
Nixon, Richard M., 65
NLA (National Liberation Army), 15455,
17980
Noli, Fan S., 365
Non-Aligned Movement, 198, 306
North Atlantic Cooperation Council, 206
North Atlantic Council (NAC), 206
North Atlantic Treaty Organization
(NATO), 2057
air patrols over Bosnia, 356
air strikes against Yugoslavia, 163, 191
in the Balkans, 19899
bombing campaign on Bosnian
Serb, 35657
and Bosnian War, 45
commencement of, 91
Croatia and, 362
International Security Assistance Force
(ISAF), 199
and Kosovo War, 16566

General Index

Military-Technical Agreement, 163


and North Atlantic Cooperation Council,
206
and North Atlantic Council (NAC), 206
Operation Determined Falcon, 164
and Slovenia, 291
Slovenia and, 363
staff of, 207
and Warsaw Pact, 32830
Yugoslav Wars and, 35657
Northern Epirus, 8
Novi Pazar, Sanjak of, 2078
Obrenovic, Milan, 12, 44, 60,
20910, 288
Obrenovic, Milos, 210, 282
Obrenovic, Alexander, 1113, 93
Obrenovic, Natalija, 12
Odessa, Siege of, 1941, 21012
Ohrid Framework Agreement, 180
Operation Accolade. See Accolade,
Operation
Operation Barbarossa. See Barbarossa,
Operation
Operation Determined Falcon. See
Determined Falcon, Operation
Operation Horseshoe. See Horseshoe,
Operation
Operation Iraqi Freedom, 199
Operation Mandibles, 97
Operation Marita. See Marita, Operation
Operation Maslenica, 84
Operation Storm, 299300
Operation Storm (Oluja), 87
Operation Uranus, 295
Orlov, Aleksey, 3
Orthodox Christianity, 349
Osman I, 214
Ottoman Alasonya Army, 118
Ottoman Counterinsurgency Operations in
the Balkans and Crete, 21214
Ottoman culture, 214
Ottoman Empire, 21415
and Armenian Genocide, 215

in the Balkan Wars, 21520


and Bosnian Crisis, 41
and Bulgarian-Serb War, 6061
and Greco-Turkish War, 119
and Greek War of Independence, 133
and Karageorge, 15860
and Russo Turkish War, 28
and Treaty of Berlin, xviii
and Treaty of Constantinople, 219
and Treaty of London, 26, 172
in World War I, 22022
World War I and the destruction of, 215
Ottoman Military Academy, 18182
Ottoman Peace, xvii
Ouchy, Treaty of, 216
Owen, David, 31920
Pact of Corfu, 279
Pact of Halepa, 79
Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), 65
Pandurs, 324
Panic, Zivota, 327
Papagos, Alexander, 116, 121, 131
Papandreou, Andreas, 223
Papandreou, Damaskinos, 140
Papandreou, George, 223
government of national unity, 100, 102
as Greece prime minister, 129
resignation as Greece prime minister, 130
Paris Peace Conference
and Neuilly, Treaty of, 203
and Romania, 244
and Saint-Germain, Treaty of, 25960
and Trianon, Treaty of, 308
and Venizelos, 322
Paris Peace Treaty, 50, 96, 107
Partisans
Albania, 22425
Bulgaria, 22526
Yugoslavia, 22627
Partisans, Yugoslav, 310
Partnership for Peace Program, 198
Pasha, Ismail, 212
Pasha, Abdulkerim Nadir, 283, 286

403

404

General Index

Pasha, Abdullah, 23, 173


Pasha, Agha Huseyin, 254
Pasha, Alemdar Mustafa, 18081, 271
Pasha, Ali, 1415
Pasha, Djemal, 335
Pasha, Enver, 1024, 160, 183, 221, 267
Pasha, Esat, 153
Pasha, Ferik Abdullah, 217
Pasha, Ferik Mehmed Sukru, 2
Pasha, Hasan Riza, 56
Pasha, Hassan Tahsin, 24
Pasha, Huseyin Avni, 301
Pasha, Husvre, 181
Pasha, Ibrahim, 200
Pasha, Mahmud Sevket, 26768
Pasha, Mahmud Muhtar, 18284
Pasha, Mehmed Ali, 301
Pasha, Muhammad Ali, 181
Pasha, Mustafa Naili, 212
Pasha, Nazim, 217, 218
mer Lutfu, 82
Pasha, O
Pasha, Osman, 229
Pasha, Rauf, 301
Pasha, Reshid Mehmed, 255
Pasha, Selim, 181
Pasha, Shevket Turgut, 10
Pasha, Suleyman Husnu, 28687
Pasha, Talaat, 335
Pasha, Tepedelenli Ali, 18081
Pasha, Zeki, 218
Pasic, Nicola, 77, 93
Pasic, Nikola, 37
Paskevich, Ivan F., 254
Paskievitch, Ivan, 82
Paulus, Friedrich, 293
Pavelic, Ante, 135, 22728, 31718, 343
Pavichenko, Vera, 211
Pax ottomanica, xvii, xx
PCC (Political Consultative
Committee), 328
PCR (Romanian Communist Party), 6465
Peasant Revolt, 15
PEEA (Political Committee of National
Liberation), 100, 129

Peoples League Party, 19


Perovic, Ivo, 352
Petain, Henri, 314
Petain, Henry, 127
Peter I, King of Serbia, 205, 234, 280
Peter II, King, 227, 306
Peter II, King of Yugoslavia, 227,
346, 348, 351
Peter II Karageorgevic, 115, 188
Peter I Karageorgevic, 11, 13, 93, 19596
Petrescu, Constantin Titel, 250
Petrovic, George, 282
Petrovic-Njegos, Danilo, 204
Petrovic-Njegos, Mirko, 204
Petrovic-Njegos, Nikola Mirkov. See Nikola
I, King of Montenegro
Philip II, 174
Plastiras, Nikolaos, 101, 130, 223
Plavsic, Biljana, 158
Pleven, Siege of, 22829
PLO (Palestine Liberation Organization), 65
Ploesti, Bombing of, 22931
PMR (Romanian Workers Party),
6465
Political Committee of National Liberation
(PEEA), 100, 129
Political Consultative Committee
(PCC), 328
Potiorek, Oskar, 66, 93, 271
Prasca, Sebastiano Visconti, 116
Prince Paul of Yugoslavia, 114, 338, 348,
35152
Princip, Gavrilo, 23132, 266
Patrascanu, Lucretiu, 250
Putnik, Radomir, 23235
attack on Ottomans, 24, 167
and Austrian invasion, 66
battle of Cer Mountain, 278
health of, 23334
Queen Natalija, 209
Radetzky, Josef, 13
Radomir Rebellion, 23637

General Index

Radoslavov, Vasil
as Bulgarian prime minister, 52
as commander of Bulgarian army, 364
joining Triple Alliance, 203
neutrality proclaimation, 54
resignation from prime ministerial
position, 56
and Treaty of Bucharest of 1913, 48
Raguz, Martin, 152
Raiding Forces Levant Schooner
Flotilla, 98
Rambouillet Accords, 165
Rapallo, Treaty of, 107, 147
Red Army
formations, 34142
inavsion of Bulgaria, xx, 58
in southeastern Europe, 72
Regina Maria, 38
Reinhardt, Georg-Hans, 346
Religion, Committee of Union and Progress
(CUP) and, 336
Revolution of April 21, 1967, 223
Rhallis, Ioannis, 127
Roman Catholicism, 318
Romania
in the Balkan Wars, 24042
invasion of 1916, 23738
invasion of 1944, 23839
and siege of Odessa, 21011
in World War I, 24245
in World War II, 24548
Romanian Boy Scouts, 63
Romanian Campaign in Hungary
of 1919, 24849
Romanian Campaign in Hungary of
19441945, 24950
Romanian Communist Party (PCR), 6465
Romanian coup, 25051
Romanianization, 140
Romanian Peasant Uprising, 25152
Romanian Workers Party (PMR), 6465
Roosevelt, Franklin D.
bombing of Ploesti, 230
death of, 70

and Dodecanese, 97
and Stalin, 71
Royal Air Force (RAF)
bases in Greece, 12021, 126
and Dodecanese campaign, 98
and Greco-Italian War, 117
Royal Irish Fusiliers, 98
Rugova, Ibrahim, 164
Rupnik, Leon, 344
Russian Civil War, 226, 305, 313
Russian Revolution, 211, 221, 243
Russian Southern Group, 286
Russo-Japanese War, 274
Russo-Ottoman War
of 18061812, 25253
of 18281829, 25456
of 18771878, 25658
Russo-Ottoman War, 17681774, 49
Russo-Ottoman War, 18061812,
180, 25253
Russo-Ottoman War, 18281829,
18182, 25456
Russo-Ottoman War, 18771878
Dimitriev in, 92
initiation of, xvii, 44
Treaty of Adrianople, 3
Russo Turkish War, 28
Sadat, Anwar, 65
Saint-Germain, Treaty of, 50,
25961, 309
Sakarya River, Battle of, 26162
Salonika, 26264
Sampson, Nick, 88
Sanatescu, Constantin, 250
San Stefano, Treaty of, 264
Bulgarian state, 28, 50
and Greater Bulgaria, 257
and Ottoman Empire, 40, 45, 60
revision of, 34
Serbia and Montenegro
independence, 338
Sapountzakes, Constantine, 24, 153
Sarajevo, Siege of, 26566

405

406

General Index

Sarajevo Assassination, 26667. See also


Ferdinand, Franz
Sarkoy and Bolayir, Battles
of, 26768
Sarkozy, Nicolas, 207
Sarrail, Maurice, 168, 177, 243
Sauberzweig, Karl-Gustav, 135
Savino, Francesco Jacomoni di San, 4
Savov, Mihail, 26869
attack on Greek and Serbian
positions, 27, 51
battle of Kalimantsi, 157
and Czar Ferdinand, 27, 30
as leader of Bulgarian armies, 23
Sazonov, Sergei, 240
Schleiffen Plan, 112
Schmidthuber, August, 28788
Scobie, Ronald, 12930
Scutari, Siege of, 26970
SDA (Stranka Demokratske Akcije), 151
Second Jassy-Kishinev Operation, 239
Second Vienna Award, 245
Selim, Mehmed, 254
Selim II, Sultan of Ottoman, 215
Selim III, Sultan of Ottoman, 27071
and Alemdar, 18081
and Karageorge, 159
reoccupation of Egypt, 185
Serbia
and the Balkan Wars, 27477
collaboration with Germany, 34344
invasions of 1914, 27172
invasions of 1915, 27273
in World War I, 27780
Serbian First Army, 11, 26
Serbian Radical Party (SRS), 68
Serbian Retreat, 1915, 28081
Serbian Second Army
and Bulgarian Second Army, 2, 25, 52
invasion of Montenegro, 196
Serbian War of Independence,
28183
Serbo-Ottoman War, 233, 28384
Seselj, Vojislav, 68

Sevastopol, 38
Se`vres, Treaty of, 119, 16970, 28486
Shehu, Mehmet, 143, 224
Shipka Pass, Battles of, 28687
Siantos, Georgios, 100
Siege of Scutari (Shkoder), 56
Sima, Horia, 14546
Simeon II, 40, 58
Simovic, Dusan, 346, 349, 352
Sinik-oglu, Hadji Mustapha, 281
Skanderbeg, George Kastrioti, 287
Skanderbeg SS Division, 28788
Slivnitsa, Battle of, 28889
Slovene War of 1991, 28991
Slovenia, 344
Smiley, David, 9
Smyrna, Destruction of, 29192
Social Liberation movement (EKKA),
100, 129
Soddu, Ubaldo, 116
Solidarity crisis, 330
Special Boat Squadron, 98
Spegelj, Martin, 83
Srebrenica Massacre, 29293
SRS (Serbian Radical Party), 68
SS Reischfuhrer, 287
SS-Standartenfuhrer, 287
Stalin, Joseph
and Churchill, 71
death of, 72
and Djilas, 94
and Romania, 247
and Roosevelt, 71
and Stalingrad Battle, 29495
Stalingrad, Battle of, 29397
Stamboliski, Aleksandur, 52, 189, 203, 236,
29798, 326
Stambolov, Stefan, 14
Stankovic, Radenko, 352
Star of David, 141
Stepanovic, Stepa, 25, 66, 298
Stepinac, Aloysius, 306
Storm, Operation, 299300, 357
Stranka Demokratske Akcije (SDA), 151

General Index

Strategic Defense Initiative, 206


Student, Kurt, 81
Sturdza, Dimitrie, 252
Sturm, Pavle Jurisich, 66
Suleiman I, Ottoman Sultan, 214
Suleyman Husnu Pasha, 300302
Sultane, 201
Supremists, 325
Sykes-Picot Agreement of 1916, 285
Tankosi, Vojislav, 232
Teleki, Pal, 323, 349
Tellini, Enrico, 78
Ten Days War. See Slovene War of 1991
Tepelene, Ali Pasha, 3034
Thaci, Hashim, 16364
13 SS Frei.Gebirgs Division (kroatien), 135
13 Waffen-Gebirgs-Division der SS
Handschar (kroatische Nr. 1). See 13
SS Frei.Gebirgs Division (kroatien)
Thirty Years War, 260
Thompson, Frank, 225
Tito, Josip Broz, 3057
and Albanian Communists, 224
and Balkan Federation, 354
and Belgrade, 115
and Communist Partisan resistance
movement, 3056
and Communist Party of Greece, 131
death of, xx, 156, 175, 3067, 339, 359
and Djilas, 94
federal republic regime, 84
interdictation of American flights, 353
leading Partisans, 34950
and Macedonians, 175
and Mihajlovic, 188
National Front, formation of, 306
and Soviet Union, xx
and Treaty of Friendship, 22
and Ustasa, 318
during World War II, 154
and Yugoslav Communist Party, 305
and Yugoslav Partisans, 22627,
310, 34951

and Yugoslav-Soviet split, 320, 35354


and Yugoslav Wars, 355, 35960
Tittoni-Venizalos agreement, 105, 147
Tolbukhin, Fyodor, 239
Topanti, Essad Pasha, 56
Toptani, Esat Pasha, 270
Total National Defense, 155
Townshend, Charles, 221
Trajkovski, Boris, 176
Trajkovski, Branko, 176
Transnistrian War, 3078
Treaties. See specific treaties
Treaty of Alliance, Political Cooperation,
and Mutual Assistance, 22
Trianon, Treaty of, 49, 171, 244, 30810, 322
Trieste Dispute, 31011
Tripartite Pact, 121, 154, 345, 349
Truce of Foscani, 243
Truman, Harry S., 7172, 131
Truman Doctrine, 31113
Trumbic, Ante, 77
Tsolakoglou, Georgios, 31314
as prime minister of Greece, 127, 31314
surrender to German invaders, 121, 126
surrender to Italians, 127
Tudjman, Franjo, 8384, 31415
Turkmenchay, Treaty of, 3
21st Waffen Mountain Division SS
Skanderbeg, 345
UCY (Union of Communist Youth), 64
Ujedinjenje ili Smrt. See Black Hand
Ujedinjenje ili Smrt (Unification
or Death), 37
Union of Communist Youth (UCY), 64
United Nations
Operation Storm and, 299
sanctions against Yugoslavia, 339
Security Council, 316
Slovenia and, 291
Srebrenica Massacre and, 29293
United Nations Protection Force, 292, 31617
Vance-Owen peace plan and, 319
Yugoslav Wars and, 35556, 362

407

408

General Index

United Nations Protection Force


(UNPROFOR), 86, 31617
United Nations Security Council, 316
Unity or Death. See Black Hand
UNPROFOR (United Nations Protection
Force), 86, 31617
Ustasa, 31718
Vance, Cyrus, 86, 88, 31920
Vance-Owen Plan, 31920
Vancho. See Mihailov, Ivan
Vandenberg, Arthur, 313
Vaphiadis, Markos, 320
Vardar Army, 6, 167, 218
Varkiza Agreement, 101, 130
Velestinlis, Rhigas, 133
Velvet Revolution of 19891990, 311
Venizelos, Eleutherios, 32122
abdication of Constantine I, 119, 322
death of, 322
differences with Constantine I, 74, 322
National Schism, 197
national schism, 124
and Papandreou, 223
at Paris Peace Conference, 322
as premier of Greece, 73
resignation as Greeces premier, 74,
12324, 321
resignation of, 263
Versailles, Treaty of, 259
Vienna Award, Second, 32224
Vladimirescu, Tudor, 324, 337
VMRO/IMRO (Internal Macedonian
Revolutionary Organization), 144, 174,
18788, 32526
von Battenberg, Alexander, 288
von Below, Otto, 168
von Bismarck, Otto, 112, 137, 264
von Bock, Fedor, 293
von Bulow, Berhard, 42
von der Goltz, Colmar, 153
von Diebitsch, Hans Karl, 255
von Falkenhayn, Erich, 48, 162, 237
von Hindenburg, Paul, 49, 56

von Hoetzendorf, Franz Conrad, 162


von Kleist, Paul Ludwig Ewald, 294, 346
von Kuhlmann, Richard, 49
von Mackensen, August, 19, 112, 23738, 279
von Manstein, Erich, 294
von Obwurzer, Herbert, 135
von Ribbentrop, Joachim, 323
Von Richtofen, Wolfram F., 296
von Sanders, Otto Liman, 110, 161, 221
von Weichs, Maximilian, 293, 341, 346
Vukmanovic, Svetozar, 224
Vukotic, Milena, 204
Vukotich, Janko, 24
Vukovar, Siege of, 327
Vulovic, Ljubomir, 37
Waffen SS, 135
Warsaw Pact, 32830
and Albania, 72, 329
creation of, 328
crisis, 330
and Gorbachev, 331
invasion of Czechoslovakia, 155
and Khrushchev, 32830
Warsaw Treaty Organization, 205
White Guards, 344
Wiesel, Elie, 140
Wilhelm II, German Emperor, 73, 112, 197, 242
William of Wied, 273
Wilson, Henry Maitland Jumbo, 121
Wilson, Woodrow
and Armenian borders, 284
Fourteen Points, 309
and independent Albania, 78
and Paris Peace conference, 148
and World War I, 57
World War I
Albania in, 78
Austria-Hungary in the Balkans, 1618
Battle of Mt. Cer and, 272
Bulgaria in, 5357
Germany in the Balkans, 11113
Greece in, 12325
Italy in the Balkans, 14647

General Index

Ottoman Empire in, 215, 219, 22022


Romania, invasion of, 23738
Romania in, 24244
Salonika and, 26263
Serbia in, 27780
siege of Odessa and, 211
Treaty of Trianon and, 308
Tsolakoglou, Georgios and, 313
VMRO and, 32526
Young Turks and, 335
World War II
Albania in, 810
Battle of Stalingrad, 293
Bulgaria in, 5758
Germany in the Balkans, 11315
Greece in, 12529
Italy in the Balkans, 14850
National Liberation Movement
(Partisans) and, 224
peace settlement in the Balkans,
33133
Romania in, 24547
siege of Odessa and, 21011
Tsolakoglou, Georgios and, 313
Tudjman, Franjo and, 314
Ustasa and, 317
Yugoslav Partisans and, 226
XLIV Panzer Corps, 114
XLIX Mountain Corps, 347
XL Panzer Corps, 34647
XLVI Panzer Crops, 347
Yanya Corps, 118
Yeltsin, Boris, 308
Young Turk Coup, xviii, 132
Young Turks, 33436
Ypsilantis, Alexander, 133, 324, 33637
Yugoslav Committee, 279
Yugoslav Communist Party (YPJ), 305

Yugoslavia, 33740
and Axis occupation forces in World
War II, 34042
and collaborationist forces in World
War II, 34245
invasion of, 34547
in World War II, 34751
military coup, 35152
Yugoslav overflight incidents, 353
Yugoslav Peoples Army. See JNA
(Yugoslav Peoples Army)
Yugoslav Peoples Army (JNA), 28991, 299
Yugoslav Royal Army, 202
Yugoslav-Soviet Split, 35354
Yugoslav Wars, 35557
and Bihac, 36
and Bosnian forces, 43
causes, 35860
consequences, 36063
and Croat War, 84
Zabtiye organization, 212
Zachariadis, Nikolaos, 100
Zanella, Riccardo, 107
Zbor, 344
Zbor narodne garde (ZNG). See Croat Forces
Zeki Pasha, Halepli, 167
Zelea Codreanu, Corneliu, 63, 145
Zervas, Napoleon, 101, 128
Zhekov, Nikola, 364
and Macedonian Front, 176
medical treatment of, 95
Zhukov, Georgii, 294
Zog, King of the Albanians, 365
escape from Albania, 8
grants by Facists, 4
Zogu/Zogolli, Ahmed Bey. See Zog, King of
the Albanians
zu Wied, Wilhelm, 7
Zveno, 18889

409

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About the Editor

Richard C. Hall, PhD, is a professor of history at Georgia Southwestern State University. His research focuses primarily on early
twentieth-century diplomatic and military
conflicts in the Balkans. Hall is the author

of Consumed by War: European Conflict in


the 20th Century (2009); Balkan Breakthrough: The Battle of Dobro Pole 1918
(2010); and Bulgarias Road to the First
World War (1996).

411

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